National Statistics Related to Woodfuel
Production and Consumption in Developing
Countries, Survey-Based Woodfuel Studies,
and International Recommendations on
Woodfuel Surveys
Technical Report Series GO-17-2016
December 2016
National Statistics Related to Woodfuel
Production and Consumption in Developing
Countries, Survey-Based Woodfuel Studies,
and International Recommendations on
Woodfuel Surveys
Drafted By
Jeremy Broadhead
Consultant
GSARS. 2016. National statistics related to woodfuel production and consumption in developing countries, survey-based woodfuel studies, and international recommendations on woodfuel surveys, by J. Broadhead. Global Strategy to Improve Agricultural and Rural Statistics, Technical Report No 17. Rome,Italy.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgements.................................................................................................. 9 Acronyms.................................................................................................................. 10 1. Introduction.......................................................................................................... 11 2. Objectives............................................................................................................. 18 3. Woodfuel production and consumption statistics in developing countries....... 19 3.1. International statistics collections including woodfuel data......................... 19 3.2. National household survey statistics including woodfuel-related data......... 28 3.3. Household energy use surveys...................................................................... 43 3.4. Survey-based woodfuel studies..................................................................... 48 4. Options for improving global woodfuel statistics............................................... 60 References................................................................................................................ 65
List of Annexes
Annex 1. The LSMS................................................................................................. 69 Annex 2. Malawi national surveys including woodfuel-related questions............. 72 Annex 3. Woodfuel-related modules included in Bakkegaard et al. (in prep.)....... 74 Annex 4. The UNICEF MICS..................................................................................... 79 Annex 5. Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) data sets containing information on cooking fuel use............................................................ 86 Annex 6. Developing countries, according to the IMF World Economic Outlook 2015........................................................................................................ 88 Annex 7. Household energy questionnaire used in study on “Patterns of Commercial Woodfuel Supply, Distribution and Use in the City and Province Of Cebu, Philippines.”.............................................................. 90 Annex 8. Woodfuel-related questions contained in questionnaire for studies..... on rural................................................................................................... energy and household forest values under varying management regimes in Ethiopia
101
Annex 9. Woodfuel-related questions contained in Nepal Community Forestry.. Program and UN-REDD – Making Community Forestry Pro-Poor Carbon Sequestration Policy Household Survey Questionnaire
106 Annex 10a. Principles, criteria and indicators for sustainable woodfuels and for sustainable charcoal production......................................................... 111 Annex 10b. Principles, criteria and indicators for sustainable charcoal Production.......................................................................................... 118 Annex 11. Approved VCS Module VMD0008: Estimation of baseline emission from forest degradation caused by extraction of wood for fuel.......... 124
List of Tables
Table 1. Percentage of FAOSTAT national woodfuel figures from different sources in developing countries, 2012........................................................ 20
Table 2. IMF developing countries and FAO LDCs reporting woodfuel statistics to FAO in 2012............................................................................................. 20 Table 3. National censuses since 2000 containing information on the use of woodfuel for cooking.................................................................................. 28 Table 4. Countries for which information on main household fuel type is available through the 2011 Compendium of Housing Statistics.................. 32 Table 5. Main multi-country surveys from which data in the WHO household energy database are derived....................................................................... 39 Table 6. MICS 3 (2005-2008/9) standard household questionnaire fuel-related Questions..................................................................................................... 79 Table 7. MICS 4 (2009-12) and 5 (2013-16) standard household questionnaire fuel-related questions.................................................................................. 80 Table 8. MICS surveys including fuel-related questions............................................ 81
List of Figures
Figure 1. Number of developing countries reporting Wood Fuel (NC), Wood Fuel (C) and Charcoal (Ch), 1961-2013................................................... 22
List of Boxes
Box 1. Woodfuel-related efforts in national REDD+ strategies........................... 14 Box 2. FAO Global Forest Products Outlook Study - Past Trends and Future Prospects for the Utilization of Wood for Energy..................................... 23 Box 3. LSMS Forestry Modules............................................................................ 35 Box 4. Information on cooking and heating practices......................................... 39 Box 5. 2005/06 Botswana’s Labour Force Survey questions on woodfuel collection and use..................................................................................... 42 Box 6. Recommendations on woodfuel consumption surveys............................ 62 Box 7. Criteria and indicators for sustainable woodfuels.................................... 63 Box 8. Key points of the conclusions and recommendations from the Proceedings of the International Workshop on Energy Survey Methodologies for Developing Countries. 21-25 January 1980, Jekyll Island, Georgia.......................................................................................... 64
9
Acknowledgements
The author would like to thank Yanshu Li, Arvydas Lebedys and Thaís
Linhares-Juvenal, FAO Forestry Department; Flavio Bolliger and Monica
Madrid, Global Strategy to Improve Agricultural and Rural Statistics; Randall
Bluffstone, Portland State University, USA; Rudi Drigo; Elizabeth Remedio,
University of San Carlos, Philippines; Conrado Hereula, UNEP Bangkok; Alex
Blackburn, UN Statistics Division; Loïc Coënt, International Energy Agency;
Besnik Hyseni, World Bank; Veronica Victorio, Department of Environment
and Natural Resources, Philippines; Lewis Gombwa, National Statistical
Office, Malawi; Sinclair Vincent, Verified Carbon Standard; Gunnar Köhlin,
University of Gothenburg; San Vibol, Royal University of Phnom Penh,
Cambodia; Sokh Heng, Forestry Administration, Cambodia and the two
anonymous reviewers for their comments on the report.
10
Acronyms and Abbreviations
AFREC African Energy Commission
CDM Clean Development Mechanism
CIFOR/PEN Center for International Forestry Research-Poverty and
Environment Network CWIQ World Bank Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire Survey
DHS Demographic and Health Surveys
FAO Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations
FCPF Forest Carbon Partnership Facility
FIP Forest Investment Program
fNRB fraction of Non-Renewable Biomass
GHO Global Health Observatory
HH Household
IEA International Energy Agency
IHSN International Household Survey Network
IMF International Monetary Found
LSMS Living Standards Measurement Study
MICS Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey
NSO National Statistics Office
OLADE Latin American Energy
PRA Participatory Rural Appraisal
SDGs Sustainable Development Goals
UNECE Economic Commission for Europe
UNFCCC United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change
UN-HABITAT United Nations Human Settlements Programme
UNICEF United Nations Children's Fund
UNSD Organization United Nations Statistics Division
USAID United States Agency for International Development
VCS Voluntary Carbon Standard
WB World Bank
WHO World Health Organization
WHS World Health Survey
11
1
Introduction
Woodfuel1 is used widely in developing countries for cooking and heating. Its
use has implications for natural resource management, energy access, climate
change, public health, labour productivity and enterprise development.
However, the collection of statistics on woodfuel production and consumption
has rarely received sufficient attention. Fuelwood and charcoal are produced on
a small scale and are of relatively low per unit economic value. They are not
generally marketed formally, and their recorded contribution to Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) is therefore limited. Household production and use of traditional
fuels is also associated with negative health impacts, especially for women and
children. Additionally, the collection, production and transportation of
fuelwood and charcoal is often arduous and may prevent allocation of time to
higher-value pursuits. These causes and effects have confined the use of
woodfuel to the poorer segments of society, in lieu of access to more
convenient sources of energy. They also underlie the absence of mainstream
economic interest in woodfuel and in the collection of related statistics.
Following the oil crisis of 1973, woodfuel use in developing countries gained
significant international attention due to perceived impending fuelwood
shortages resulting from huge and rising aggregate demand (Eckholm, 1975).
The socioeconomic dimensions of the forthcoming “fuelwood crisis” were
given specific attention. However, there were also environmental implications –
in particular, rising demand for fuelwood from growing populations would lead
to widespread degradation and clearance of forests (de Montalambert &
Clement, 1983). These various dimensions prompted a surge in interest in
woodfuels throughout the 1980s, with the mobilization of a wide range of
programmes to address foreseen shortages, including tree planting in particular
(Arnold et al., 2003). The calculations upon which the crisis was founded were,
however, faulty and failed to account for fuel switching with income growth or
collection of fuelwood from outside designated forest areas, which formed the
basis of supply estimates. As such, the crises forecast did not occur. In addition,
1 The term “woodfuel” is used to cover fuelwood and charcoal, but not black liquor, wood for
direct combustion to produce electricity or pyrolysis gases, pellets, ethanol or methanol, etc.
produced from wood. See FAO (2002a), available at:
http://www.fao.org/docrep/005/Y3779E/y3779e00.htm#TopOfPage.
12
most attempts to ameliorate the predicted supply-demand imbalances were not
successful in any case (Arnold et al., 2003; Bailis & Hyman, 2011).
With the advances in socioeconomic development around the world, the tacit
assumption subsequently arose that traditional sources of energy – including
fuelwood and charcoal – were heading for extinction, and that substitution with
modern fuels was a foregone and welcome conclusion. Although well over two
billion people (primarily in developing countries) continued to use woodfuel as
their primary source of household energy, this assumption undoubtedly reduced
interest in collection of statistics on woodfuel production and consumption
(FAO, 2014). The promotion of sustainable woodfuel use, through efforts to
ensure continued wood supply and encourage adoption of improved cookstoves,
also received less attention (Arnold et al., 2003).
Against this background, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations (FAO) has been collecting and publishing national statistics on the
production and trade of wood products, including woodfuel and charcoal2, since
1947. In the many cases where countries do not submit figures in response to
the annual questionnaires, estimates of woodfuel production are used. Prior to
2001, these default estimates were calculated by multiplying per capita demand
figures by the population. The assumptions underlying the method of
calculation had much in common with those upon which the fuelwood crisis
was founded, and resulted in ever-increasing levels of woodfuel production and
consumption as the population grew3.
In the late 1990s, growing concerns over climate change and an increasing
interest in the potential role of forestry raised the likelihood that FAO forest
products statistics would become a focus of attention in estimating forestry
sector greenhouse gas emissions (GHG). The huge volumes of woodfuel
consumed around the world and the large proportion of global roundwood
production accounted for by woodfuel multiplied the potentially adverse impact
of inaccurate figures on national- and international-level policy processes. FAO
therefore made efforts to improve the methodology used for estimating default
woodfuel consumption figures. As a result, a set of regression models was
developed based on woodfuel consumption figures from surveys and national
consumption estimates submitted by countries to FAO. Most importantly, the
modelled consumption estimates were calculated using a range of explanatory
2 The FAO country questionnaires and resulting statistics presented on FAOSTAT include
woodfuel and charcoal separately, even though charcoal is a component of woodfuel. 3 As woodfuels are seldom imported or exported, production and consumption are often
assumed to be equivalent.
13
variables encompassing income, forest area, urban proportion of the population,
land area, temperature and oil production (Broadhead, Bahdon & Whiteman,
2001). In line with the findings of individual surveys on fuel switching with
income growth, the models suggested that woodfuel consumption in developing
countries is generally either falling in absolute terms, or falling on a per capita
basis.
While the revised woodfuel production estimates are undoubtedly more
accurate than those previously published, the easing trends and absence of an
impending crisis did little to encourage greater global interest in fuelwood and
charcoal use. Indeed, the following years saw a continuing decline in woodfuel-
related programmatic activity, and forestry departments also became less active
in the area. Collection of national woodfuel-related information in developing
countries largely became the confine of energy agencies interested in patterns of
energy consumption; labour organizations concerned with time spent collecting
and producing woodfuel and associated working conditions; and national
statistics agencies aiming to collect health- and energy-related information
through population and housing censuses. Questions such as whether
households use fuelwood or charcoal have generally been the focus, while
information on amounts consumed, sources, legality and other forest-related
aspects have not been collected.
In more recent years, fuelwood and charcoal consumption has, as expected,
received increasing interest in relation to climate change mitigation. National-
level UNFCCC-related REDD+4 programmes have frequently included
woodfuel-related interventions, as outlined in Box 1. Associated efforts to
outline methods for inclusion of woodfuel in national REDD+ programs have
also been made (e.g. Democratic Republic of the Congo and Burkina Faso:
Schure et al., 2014). Additionally, forest carbon projects have developed
methodologies for estimation of baseline emission from forest degradation
caused by extraction of woodfuel5. Significant attention has also come from
clean cookstove programmes aiming to improve public health, reduce emissions
and generate revenues from the sale of carbon credits (Grieshop, Marshall, &
Kandlikar 2011; Parker et al., 2015). In many cases, emissions calculations
have been derived from stock woodfuel consumption estimates and default
fractions of non-renewable biomass (fNRB) based on broad and untested
4 Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation in developing countries, and
the role of conservation, sustainable management of forests, and enhancement of forest carbon
stocks in developing countries. 5 Approved VCS Module VMD0008: Estimation of baseline emission from forest degradation
caused by extraction of wood for fuel. Available at http://www.v-c-s.org/sites/v-c-
s.org/files/VMD0008%20BL-DFW%20Fuelwood%20baseline.pdf. See also Annex 7 below.
14
assumptions. The efficiency of related interventions in reducing emissions from
deforestation and degradation is therefore unclear. According to FAO (2010),
“the calculation of CO2 emissions and greenhouse gas impacts associated with
bioenergy is plagued by a number of uncertainties, most of which are poorly
addressed in current accounting methods” (p. 29).
Box 1. Woodfuel-related efforts in national REDD+ strategies
Of 31 Readiness Preparation Plans (R-PPs) under the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility
(FCPF) Readiness Fund, over half include woodfuel interventions and cookstoves; a further
four promote alternatives to woodfuel (Kissinger, Herold & De Sy, 2012). Examples include:
Ethiopia: Adopting efficient fuelwood stoves.
Cameroon: Developing biogas production to generate electricity.
Kenya: Assisting implementation of legislation on charcoal production and
transportation.
Uganda: Tree planting and establishment of woodlots by farmers, government
institutions and commercial users such as tea producers.
United Republic of Tanzania: Accelerating participatory land use planning and
establishing village firewood or charcoal production areas.
Under the World Bank’s Forest Investment Program (FIP) four of eight countries include
reduced woodfuel use and/or sustainable woodfuel production in their proposed investment
plans. Activities include:
Mexico: Encouraging use of local wood lots, collecting sustainable fuelwood and
logging debris in production forests, and formalizing commercial fuelwood collection
and trade.
Democratic Republic of the Congo: Distributing improved cookstoves and training
communities in charcoal-making.
Ghana: Promoting sustainable woodfuel production.
Burkina Faso: Addressing drivers of deforestation and degradation, including woodfuel
and charcoal production.
Under the FCPF Carbon Fund, six of eleven accepted country proposals include woodfuel
demand as a main driver of forest degradation, and propose different solutions:
Congo: Distributing and promoting cookstoves in urban centres;
Viet Nam: Providing renewable energy solutions, including biogas and waste-to-energy;
Nepal: Installing biogas plants to reduce woodfuel demand;
Democratic Republic of the Congo: Implementing an Eco-Charcoal Program to
sustainably produce charcoal from plantations and degraded forest to substitute for
“bush” charcoal;
Chile: Promoting use of official woodfuel processing centres and developing
competitivity and legality in the forestry products value chain;
Guatemala: Updating forest inspection systems and reducing illegal woodfuel
production.
Source: based on Parker et al. (2015).
15
More broadly, and despite falling per capita consumption and the absence of
any previously unforeseen crisis, the magnitude of woodfuel use in developing
countries, the number of users and the potential impact of woodfuel
consumption on livelihoods and the environment demand continuation of
efforts to collect woodfuel consumption statistics. As experience has shown, a
lack of sound statistics can allow proliferation of misguided and ineffective
policy and renewed effort is necessary to avoid such possibility. Furthermore,
the impact of commercial production of fuelwood and charcoal on forest
resources remains varied and uncertain, and changes in household woodfuel
consumption trends resulting from economic downturns or fossil fuel price
fluctuations cannot be excluded. It has also been suggested that, in some areas,
a switch to modern fuels may take time, and that a focus on substitution could
be counterproductive in increasing access to sustainable fuels and improving
management of forest resources, because the demand for woodfuel will persist
(Maes & Verbist, 2012; Zulu, 2010). It should also be considered that, if used
with appropriate equipment and in accordance with the principles of
sustainability, woodfuel may provide economic, social and environmental
benefits; further, it may present opportunities for enterprise development and
income generation, while also reducing fossil fuel consumption.
In this context, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)6 call for action in a
number of areas that are potentially relevant to woodfuel consumption and
production:
SDG 3: Ensure healthy lives and promote well-being for all at all ages;
SDG 5: Achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls;
SDG 7: Ensure access to affordable, reliable, sustainable and modern
energy for all;
SDG 12: Ensure sustainable consumption and production patterns;
SDG 13: Take urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts;
SDG 15: Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial
ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt
and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss.
Goals 7, 13 and 15 are perhaps most directly relevant to woodfuel use, although
their impact on consumption patterns will depend on the extent to which
woodfuel can be used sustainably and on the availability and sustainability of
6 More information on the United Nations SDGs is available at
http://www.un.org/sustainabledevelopment/sustainable-development-goals/.
16
alternatives. As such, woodfuel has the potential to play a role in sustainable
development, and may be far from becoming extinct as an energy source.
For the many reasons outlined above, improved woodfuel consumption
statistics are essential. Improved statistics will benefit the poorer segments of
society in developing countries by facilitating the development of policies and
programmes aimed at improving access to sustainable energy sources and
sustainable natural resource management. Benefits to the international
community through GHG emissions reduction may also be possible; in
addition, given the recent galvanizing of the global responses to climate change
by the agreement reached at the COP 21 in Paris, significant increases in
international financing for climate change are expected in coming years. In
programming this funding, accurate statistics will be invaluable.
Improving woodfuel consumption statistics is, however, not a simple task;
woodfuel consumption surveys are expensive and accurate results are difficult
to achieve (Openshaw, 1979). Often, the countries most dependent on woodfuel
are also among the poorest, and have limited resources available for collecting
such information. In this context, including woodfuel-related questions in
existing national household surveys offers advantages in terms of costs and the
breadth and representativeness of the sampling frameworks employed. National
household surveys that have included questions on primary fuel use could also
serve as sampling frameworks in estimating the quantities of woodfuel
consumed at the national level, through subsequent rapid assessments.
As well as providing information of direct interest at national and subnational
levels, surveys can provide invaluable information on the evolving relationships
between variables such as woodfuel consumption, conversion technologies
used, urbanization, availability of forest resources and other supply sources, and
income. Such information, collected in surveys carried out across a number of
countries, could be used to estimate regional and global patterns of woodfuel
consumption with much greater accuracy than is possible with currently
available data.
This Technical Report constitutes an initial step of a project that aims to
enhance national statistics on woodfuel production and consumption in
developing countries by creating and testing a tool to integrate a woodfuel
module into national household surveys. The project focuses on the informal
production and consumption of woodfuel, i.e. household and small-scale
enterprises and producing units.
The Review is structured as follows: after this introduction and a statement of
the objectives, Section 3 summarizes the many different data collection
17
initiatives, censuses and surveys that focus partially or entirely on woodfuel
use; the section includes a description of larger surveys, along with the
questions included and the woodfuel information currently available from past
survey iterations. Small-scale surveys described in journal articles, proceedings,
project reports and other literature are not comprehensively reviewed, owing to
the scale of the task involved; instead, a broad selection of different survey
types and their contents are examined. Drawing on information summarized in
Section 3, Section 4 outlines potential next steps in improving woodfuel
production and consumption statistics in developing countries, by making use
of existing data and developing a woodfuel module for inclusion in household
surveys or to be used as a stand-alone survey tool. At the end, a set of Annexes
is available.
Finally, it is important to note that this document was produced under one of
the key components of the Global Strategy to Improve Agriculture and Rural
Statistics (GSARS or Global Strategy): the Research Plan, that aims to develop
cost-effective methods that will serve as the basis for preparing technical
guidelines, handbooks and training material to be used by consultants, country
statisticians and training centres. The Research Plan includes a topic titled
“National statistics related to woodfuel production and consumption in
developing countries, survey-based woodfuel studies, and international
recommendations on woodfuel surveys”. This document, originally prepared as
a working paper, has been finalized as the first of several Technical Reports
planned by this research topic in collaboration with the Forestry Policy and
Resources Division (FOA) of FAO’s Forestry Department.
18
2
Objectives
Under the Global Strategy’s research component, this Literature Review aims
to assess the quality and availability of woodfuel statistics and associated
information on the related economic, social and environmental dimensions;
highlight major data gaps; and propose recommendations for improvements in
view of relevant international guidance, including criteria and indicators for
sustainable woodfuels. The specific objectives are to:
1. Review the literature on (i) national statistics related to woodfuel
production and consumption in developing countries; and (ii) survey-
based woodfuel studies;
2. Analyse the design of woodfuel surveys in relation to international
recommendations.
19
3
Woodfuel Production and
Consumption Statistics in
Developing Countries
Woodfuel statistics are published by a wide range of entities working at
different levels and covering different geographical areas. At the international
level, several agencies publish annual national woodfuel, fuelwood, charcoal or
solid biomass consumption figures for many countries, and have done so for
several years, as detailed in Section 3.1.
Woodfuel-related data is also collected through an extensive range of
internationally supported population and housing surveys and censuses, as
reviewed in Section 3.2. In most cases, woodfuel consumption is not quantified;
rather, the focus is on information of socioeconomic interest, such as fuel types
used for household cooking, lighting and heating, expenditure on fuel, time
spent collecting fuelwood, type of stove used, etc.
At the national level, household surveys conducted by energy agencies often
provide more detailed information on woodfuel use and on the use of other
energy sources (see Section 3.3). Smaller-scale woodfuel and energy surveys
also provide systematically collected information on woodfuel consumption
depending on the purpose of the survey. Generally, these are conducted at the
level of individual villages, towns or regions, but may also be conducted at the
national level (see Section 3.4).
3.1. International statistics collections including
woodfuel data
3.1.1. Faostat
Through the FAOSTAT database, FAO publishes national figures for the
production and trade of coniferous (C) and non-coniferous (NC) woodfuel and
charcoal. Flags are provided to indicate the source of the figures, as shown in
Table 1. Country reporting rates have fluctuated over the decades; in any case,
they have always remained relatively low. For example, in 2012, woodfuel
(NC) production figures were only provided by 23 percent of the 221 countries
20
for which any woodfuel or charcoal production or trade records exist in
FAOSTAT. This compared to 21 percent for woodfuel (C) and 24 percent for
charcoal. In the case of the 151 countries defined as “developing” by
International Monetary Fund (IMF)7, the respective figures are 17 percent, 15
percent and 18 percent, as shown in Table 1.
Table 1. Percentage of FAOSTAT national woodfuel figures from different sources in
developing countries, 2012.
Flag Data source Wood Fuel
NC (%)
Wood
Fuel C
(%)
Charcoa
l (%)
F FAO estimate 75.5 76.2 73.5
Fp Provisional computer-calculated data 1.3 2.6 2.0
Q Official data reported by countries on FAO
questionnaires 16.6 14.6 17.9
W Data reported on official country publications
or websites, or trade country files 0.0 0.0 0.7
X Reliable international sources (USDA, WTO,
World Bank, IMF, IEA, UNSD) 2.0 1.3 0.7
- IMF developing countries with no woodfuel-
related records in FAOSTAT 4.6 5.3 5.3
In 2012, 37 developing countries reported one or more components of woodfuel
production to FAO (Table 2). Only five of these were among the 29 FAO-
defined Least Developed Countries (LDCs); in all of these cases, only one
component was reported (Table 2).
Table 2. IMF developing countries and FAO LDCs reporting woodfuel statistics to FAO in
2012.
Country (LDCs in bold) Wood Fuel NC Wood Fuel C Charcoal
Argentina x x x
Armenia
x x
Azerbaijan
x
Belarus x x x
Bosnia and Herzegovina x x x
Brazil x x
Bulgaria x x
Burundi x
Croatia x x
Eritrea x
7 See the IMF World Economic Outlook 2015:
http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2015/02/pdf/text.pdf.
21
Georgia x x
Honduras
x
Hungary x x x
Iran (Islamic Republic of) x
x
Kyrgyzstan
x
Malaysia
x
Mali
x
Mauritius x x x
Mexico
x
Mozambique
x
Peru x
x
Philippines
x
Poland x x x
Republic of Moldova x x
Romania x x x
Russian Federation
x
Serbia x x x
Sudan
x
The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia x x x
Tunisia x x x
Turkey x x
Turkmenistan x x x
Uganda x
Ukraine x x x
Uruguay x x
Uzbekistan x x x
Viet Nam x
x
Since 1961, trends in country reporting of woodfuel production figures to FAO
have fluctuated, as shown in Figure 1. below. Increased reporting in the mid-
1970s is likely to have been a response to the fuelwood crisis predicted; the
increases from 2008/09 probably reflect increasing interest in woodfuel in
relation to climate change.
22
Figure 1. Number of developing countries reporting Wood Fuel (NC), Wood Fuel (C) and
Charcoal (Ch), 1961-2013
When countries do submit official data to FAO, information on their sources is
often not available; therefore, their reliability cannot be assessed. The Joint
Forest Sector Questionnaires through which data is collected are sent to
national correspondent for forest sector statistics. Thus, the estimates may only
include woodfuel derived from areas designated as forest or officially recorded
woodfuel production; as such, they may underestimate actual production (FAO,
2002b).
When countries do not submit woodfuel and charcoal production figures to
FAO, modelled estimates of fuelwood and charcoal consumption are used to
estimate production, taking into account any submitted import and export data.
The modelled consumption estimates are based on household and non-
household fuelwood and charcoal consumption data from field-based surveys
(see Box 2) and official national woodfuel consumption data submitted to FAO
by countries (Broadhead et al., 2001). The majority of the models employ a
range of explanatory variables encompassing income, forest area, urban
proportion of the population, land area, temperature and oil production. Where
less than 10 official woodfuel production records had been reported to FAO by
any one country prior to 2000, forecasts and hindcasts were based on these
figures, together with income and/or population data. Coniferous/non-
coniferous (C/NC) proportions of woodfuel production are based on the figures
submitted to FAO by countries in 1999 or, where figures were not submitted,
woodfuel is assumed to be 100 percent non-coniferous for tropical countries
and 100 percent coniferous for high-latitude countries.
23
Box 2. FAO Global Forest Products Outlook Study - Past Trends and Future Prospects
for the Utilization of Wood for Energy
In 2001, FAO published a compendium of information on woodfuel consumption, gathered
through a wide-ranging literature search (Bahdon et al., 2001). The report contains woodfuel
consumption data and associated information from surveys undertaken in 239 locations across
66 countries, and published between 1965 and 1996. Almost all the data is from developing
countries and comprises household, industrial and commercial consumption of fuelwood and
charcoal, together with data on supply source, socioeconomic information and local price and
income data where available. The 459 data records collected were used in parameterizing the
models used to estimate fuelwood and charcoal consumption for all countries between 1961
and 2030. These estimates are included in FAOSTAT when countries do not submit woodfuel
production figures to FAO.
In relation to household woodfuel and charcoal consumption in developing
countries, FAOSTAT data have advantages and disadvantages. Advantages
include:
Broad country coverage and long time series availability (1961-present and
projections up to 2030);
Data are either official or, to the extent possible, estimated on the basis of
official data and actual measurement of woodfuel consumption retrievable
from surveys, as outlined above and detailed in Broadhead et al. (2001).
Disadvantages include the following:
The official data, which directly account for a proportion of all woodfuel
consumption data and contribute significantly to FAO estimates, are derived
from unknown sources.
FAO estimates make extensive use of survey-based data and are therefore
subject to sample selection bias.
FAOSTAT figures represent total national production/consumption,
including both household and non-household consumption8.
FAO estimates use both cross-sectional and time series data for
extrapolation, with unknown effects on reliability.
FAO estimates are extrapolated on the basis of GDP, population and forest
area figures available in 1998; actual figures are likely to have diverged
considerably since then, especially those for GDP.
8 Segregated household and non-household consumption figures are, however, available (see
Broadhead et al., 2001).
24
FAO estimates for charcoal and non-household fuelwood consumption are
unlikely to be highly accurate, owing to the paucity of data on which the
models were based.
Despite this long list of disadvantages, the FAOSTAT figures still constitute the
most complete, best-documented and probably most reliable global data sets on
woodfuel consumption.
3.1.2. The international energy agency (IEA)
The IEA publishes national aggregate production and consumption figures on
renewables and waste, including solid biofuels and charcoal, for 34 OECD9
countries and 108 non-OECD countries and territories. Data for most countries
is available back to 1990. Figures are provided on an annual basis in terajoules
for the following:
1. Production of solid biofuels (excluding charcoal) including: (i)
Fuelwood, wood residues and by-products; (ii) Wood pellets; (iii) Black
liquor; (iv) Bagasse; (v) Animal waste; and (vi) Other vegetal materials
and residues.
2. Consumption of solid biofuels and of charcoal by different sectors:
Industry, Transport Commercial and public services; Residential;
Agriculture/Forestry; Fishing; Not elsewhere specified (Other).
Country administrations submit figures via IEA/OECD-Eurostat-UNECE10
joint questionnaires11
. For developing countries, little information is available
on surveys or estimation techniques (IEA, pers. comm., 4 December 2015).
When data are not received, estimates are drawn from various sources,
including FAO, the African Energy Commission (AFREC) and Latin American
Energy Organization (OLADE)12
.
In relation to household woodfuel production and consumption in developing
countries, the IEA figures are of limited use. Annual national solid biofuel and
charcoal consumption figures for the residential sector are available only in
terajoules, and are based on unknown estimation procedures. The “Solid
9 Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
10 United Nations Economic Commission for Europe.
11 See: http://www.iea.org/statistics/resources/questionnaires/annual/ 12
OLADE estimates of national residential wood consumption for cooking are based on
standard wood consumption figures per person per meal, adjusted according to the number of
wood-consuming households, household size, whether wood is the only cooking fuel or a
primary or secondary fuel, and the number of urban and rural households (IEA, pers. comm., 15
January 2016).
25
biofuels” category also includes items that are not of direct interest in relation
to household woodfuel use: wood pellets, black liquor, bagasse, animal waste
and other vegetal materials and residues.
3.1.3. The United Nations Statistics Division (UNSD)
The UNSD Energy Statistics Database contains data on annual household
fuelwood and charcoal consumption in the biomass and waste category.
Fuelwood consumption data are reported in cubic metres and are available for
210 countries. Charcoal consumption data are reported in metric tonnes and are
available for 179 countries. Data are available online back to 1990; fuelwood
and charcoal data from before 1990 may be available in the full database.
Data are either derived from IEA figures13
, submitted by national statistics
offices or ministries of energy or environment through the UNSD Annual
Questionnaire on Energy Statistics14
, drawn from country publications,
estimated by UNSD based on previous firm data from the country, or based on
FAO data but referred to as estimates (UNSD, pers. comm., 30 December
2015).
A rapid assessment of all household fuelwood consumption records since 1990
contained in the Energy Statistics Database15
showed that 67 percent are
estimates and around 45 percent of these are equivalent to the total national
fuelwood consumption figures published in FAOSTAT. Overall, approximately
one third of all fuelwood consumption records appear equivalent to FAO data,
despite the difference in quantity (household vs total national consumption).
With respect to household charcoal consumption data since 1990, 51 percent
are estimates, and most of these are equivalent to the total national charcoal
production figures published in FAOSTAT. In total, approximately 50 percent
of the “household” charcoal consumption figures coincide with FAO total
national charcoal production figures.
The only household fuelwood and charcoal consumption data in the Energy
Statistics Database that are potentially based on original sources appear to be
those submitted by national agencies. However, these figures may also be from
13
The IEA provides the UNSD with information on the production of individual products
contained under the “Solid biofuels” heading, which the UNSD then allocates to transformation
and consumption. For example, a proportion of “Fuelwood, wood residues and by-products”
will be allocated to residential consumption (UNSD, pers. comm., 31 December 2015). 14
The UNSD’s Annual Questionnaire on Energy Statistics is available at
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/energy/quest.htm.
15 The UNSD Energy Statistics Database fuelwood data are available at
http://data.un.org/Data.aspx?d=EDATA&f=cmID%3aFW%3btrID%3a1231.
26
undocumented sources; therefore, it may be best to avoid using records in the
database unless sound information validating the source can be found.
3.1.4. Other sources
In addition to the sources outlined above, Drigo (2005) lists the following
woodfuel data sources of potential relevance to household fuelwood and
charcoal consumption in developing countries:
Country reports from the FAO/EC Partnership Programme on
Sustainable Forest Management
These are thematic studies on wood energy statistics covering 39
countries carried out within the framework of the FAO/EC Partnership
Programme on Sustainable Forest Management (2000–2002). The
country studies provide short time series based on information from
national and local surveys, and other material.
ENDA/IEPE
In 1995, the Environmental Development Action in the Third World
(ENDA), Senegal and the Institut d’Économie et de Politique de
l’Énergie (IEPE), France published a study on the energy situation in 28
French-speaking African countries. This study included national-level
data, but not time series.
The UNECE/FAO Forestry and Timber Section Joint Wood Energy
Enquiry16
The Joint Wood Energy Enquiry is implemented in UNECE countries
and collates national-level information on wood energy through a
biennial questionnaire. The enquiry collects disaggregated data on the
supply and use of wood energy, and does not require official data. As
such, official data on wood energy is critically assessed and
complemented with empirical data from studies, science and the
industry. Expert estimates may also be included.
16
The UNECE/FAO Joint Wood Energy Enquiry is available at
http://www.unece.org/forests/jwee.html.
27
ESMAP
The World Bank Energy Sector Management Assistance Program
(ESMAP) conducted numerous projects in the 1970s and 1980s,
covering 39 African countries. Project documents contained original
data and information on woodfuels.
The RWEDP17
In Asia, FAO implemented the Regional Wood Energy Development
Programme (RWEDP) to strengthen wood energy-related assessment
and planning in 16 developing countries in South and South-East Asia.
National-level data were produced prior to 1997.
Selected data from ESMAP and the RWEDP are included in the FAO Global
Forest Products Outlook Study (Bahdon et al., 2001; see also Box 2).
17
For more information on the RWEDP, see
http://wgbis.ces.iisc.ernet.in/energy/HC270799/RWEDP/public.html.
28
3.2. National household survey statistics including
woodfuel-related data
Nationally-led population and housing censuses in developing countries
frequently contain questions on household fuel sources. For example:
The 2011 Botswana Population and Housing Census covered every
household in the country and included questions on the principal energy
sources used for household lighting, cooking and space heating18
.
The Ghana 2010 population and housing census19
included questions on
main fuels used for lighting and cooking, including fuelwood and charcoal
(GSS, 2013).
The India Census 2011 collected information on households by type of fuel
used for cooking (Firewood, Crop residue, Cowdung cake, Coal, Lignite,
Charcoal, Kerosene, LPG, Electricity, Biogas, Any other, No cooking).
As outlined in the subsections below, in addition to information from sources
supported by international organizations, an unpublished review conducted by
FAO in preparation for the 2014 edition of The State of the World’s Forests
identified 21 national censuses containing information on use of woodfuel for
cooking, as shown in Table 3.
Table 3. National censuses since 2000 containing information on the use of woodfuel for
cooking.
Albania (2011) China (2010) Nepal (2011)
Armenia (2001) Cook Islands (2006) Panama (2010)
Bangladesh (2011) India (2011) Senegal (2006)
Belize (2010) Indonesia (2010) Solomon Islands (2009)
Bhutan (2005) Iran (2011) South Africa (2007)
Bolivia (2007) Malawi (2008) Sudan (former) (2008)
Cambodia (2008) Micronesia, Fed. States of
(2000) Vanuatu (2009)
As noted, several international organizations – including the World Bank (WB),
various United Nations (UN) bodies and the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID) – also support collection of household-
level socioeconomic data in developing countries, including woodfuel-related
information. These and other organizations disseminate information from the
surveys that they support and, in some cases, from a wider range of household
18
The Botswana Population and Housing Census 2011 Analytical Report may be found at
http://www.cso.gov.bw/images/analytical_report.pdf. 19
The Ghana 2010 population and housing census materials are available at
http://catalog.ihsn.org/index.php/catalog/3780.
29
surveys and national population and housing censuses. For example, the
International Household Survey Network’s (IHSN) central survey catalogue
and the UN Compendium of Housing Statistics provide information collected
from surveys and censuses in several countries to support data sharing and
coordination. The World Health Organization (WHO) Household energy
database compiles information related to exposure to household air pollution
from surveys conducted by the WHO and other bodies. The WHO also
maintains the Global Health Observatory (GHO) data repository, which
contains estimates of population using solid fuels in 194 countries.
In relation to woodfuel, many of these surveys do not extend beyond enquiries
on the types of fuel used in different household applications, with the focus
often limited to the primary fuel used for cooking. Some surveys also include
questions on time spent gathering fuelwood and woodfuel expenditure. The
United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) Multiple Indicator Cluster Surveys,
Demographic and Health Surveys and WHO surveys include questions on
cooking location and equipment used; Labour Force Surveys commonly include
questions on time spent engaged in woodfuel collection/production and injuries
associated with woodfuel use. Despite these general rules, many surveys
contain additional information on quantities of woodfuel consumed and source.
The individual initiatives summarized above are reviewed in the following
subsections, although it should be noted that overlaps in coverage between the
different statistical collections exist and have not been fully resolved. It should
also be noted that few of these initiatives include information on quantities of
woodfuel consumed.
3.2.1. The International Household Survey Network (IHSN)
The IHSN is an informal network of international agencies that aims to improve
the availability, accessibility and quality of survey data within developing
countries, and to encourage the analysis and use of this data by national and
international development decision makers, the research community and other
stakeholders. To support these aims, the IHSN maintains a Central Survey data
catalogue20
, which informs data users of the availability of survey and census
data from multiple sources.
20
IHSN Central Survey catalogue: http://catalog.ihsn.org/index.php/catalog.
30
The IHSN Central Survey catalogue provides a searchable list of surveys and
censuses conducted in low- and middle-income countries. Searches of this list
identified 466 surveys containing questions including the words “firewood”,
“fuelwood” or “charcoal”. The surveys cover 103 low- and middle-income
countries and include Living Standards Measurement Surveys, Multiple
Indicator Cluster Surveys, Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire Surveys and
Labour Force Surveys (see below), as well as population and housing censuses,
agricultural censuses and surveys on food security and vulnerability, disability,
education, energy, income and expenditure, health and industries.
The catalogue provides the survey questionnaire(s), manuals and report(s), and
a list of related citations when available. A link to external catalogues
containing survey data is provided, if available.
Common woodfuel-related questions contained in identified surveys cover the
following:
Incidence of household fuelwood or charcoal use;
Expenditure on fuelwood and/or charcoal;
Price of firewood and/or charcoal;
Sale of charcoal and/or charcoal;
Cutting of firewood;
Time spent collecting firewood;
Location of charcoal purchase;
Cooking fuel type used;
Stove type used;
Light source;
Availability of firewood and/or charcoal.
Less frequently posed questions cover the following:
Source of firewood;
Production of firewood;
Quantity of firewood and/or charcoal consumed;
Planting of trees for firewood or charcoal production;
Changes in firewood and charcoal availability and price, and reasons;
Environmental problems, including deforestation;
Change in distance to source of firewood.
31
Countries with richer collections of woodfuel-related information referred to in
the IHSN catalogue include the following:
Bangladesh Kenya Philippines
Cambodia Malawi South Africa
Ethiopia Mongolia Sri Lanka
Ghana Nepal Uganda
India Nigeria Zambia
Indonesia Pakistan
3.2.2. The UN compendium of housing statistics
The UNSD collects official national statistics on housing stock and housing
conditions generated from population and housing censuses21
. In 2005, the
UNSD initiated a systematic and regular collection of basic statistics on
housing by introducing a housing statistics questionnaire. Earlier data
collections were conducted in 1992 and 1999, in collaboration with the United
Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-HABITAT).
The 2011 Compendium of Housing Statistics includes a table on the “Occupied
housing units by type of housing unit, main type of fuel used for cooking and
urban/rural location: latest available year, 1995 – 2010”, which covers 35
countries22
. The information is drawn from censuses detailed in the UNdata
retrieval system23
.
21
For the UNSD demographic and social statistics on housing, see
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/sconcerns/housing/default.htm. 22
The Compendium of Housing Statistics 2011 may be consulted at
http://unstats.un.org/unsd/demographic/sconcerns/housing/chs2011.htm. 23
The UNdata system is available at
http://data.un.org/Data.aspx?d=POP&f=tableCode%3a293.
32
Table 4. Countries for which information on main household fuel type is available through
the 2011 Compendium of Housing Statistics.
Algeria: 2008 (no firewood or charcoal) Mauritius: 2000
Antigua and Barbuda: 2001 (no charcoal) Mexico: 2010 (no charcoal)
Azerbaijan 2009: (no firewood or
charcoal) Montenegro: 2003 (no firewood or charcoal)
Botswana: 2001 Nicaragua: 2005 (no charcoal)
Burkina Faso: 2006 Occupied Palestinian Territory: 1997 (no charcoal)
Cambodia: 2008 Palau: 2005 (no firewood or charcoal)
Cayman Islands: 2010 (no firewood) Peru: 2007 (no charcoal)
Chile: 2002 (no charcoal) Republic of Moldova: 2004 (no firewood or
charcoal)
Colombia: 2005 (no charcoal) Romania: 2002 (no firewood or charcoal)
Costa Rica: 2000 (no firewood or
charcoal) South Africa: 2001 (no charcoal)
Dominican Republic: 2002 Swaziland: 2007 (no charcoal)
DPR Korea: 2008 (no charcoal) Thailand: 2000
Ethiopia: 2007 Tokelau: 2006 (no charcoal)
Jamaica: 2001 Tonga: 2006 (no charcoal)
Kenya: 1999 Uganda: 2002
Lesotho: 2006 (no charcoal) Uruguay: 1996 (no charcoal)
Liberia: 2008 Zimbabwe: 2002 (no charcoal)
Maldives: 2006 (no charcoal) -
3.2.3. The Living Standards Measurement study (LSMS)
The LSMS is a household survey program conducted within the Surveys &
Methods Unit of the World Bank’s Development Research Group, which
provides technical assistance to national statistical offices (NSOs) in designing
and implementing multi-topic household surveys. Surveys containing
information on household energy use are available for 37 countries, as shown in
Annex 1 to this Technical Report.
Although questions from more recent surveys held in developing countries
generally did not include quantities consumed, a range of woodfuel-related
topics was indeed covered:
Brazil 1997 Survey of Living Conditions - Cooking fuel types.
Burkina Faso 2014 Enquête Multisectorielle Continue - Primary fuels for
lighting and cooking and expenditure on fuelwood or charcoal consumed
for heating.
33
Ethiopia 2013 Socioeconomic Survey – hours spent collecting firewood;
expenditure on firewood and charcoal; main source of light; main source of
cooking fuel (including collected firewood, purchased firewood, charcoal);
sale of firewood or charcoal.
Ghana 1998 Living Standards Survey – time spent fetching wood for
household use; main household cooking fuel.
India 1997 – Uttar Pradesh and Bihar Survey of Living Conditions –
Primary and secondary household cooking fuel; household expenditure on
wood.
Iraq 2012 Iraq Household Socio-Economic Survey – Primary and
secondary sources of energy used for cooking, lighting, heating, cooling,
warming water; sale, consumption and purchase of forest products in
monetary units; household acquisition of wood for fuel.
Malawi 2013 Third Integrated Household Survey – hours spent
collecting fuelwood, main source of fuel for cooking and lighting, firewood
collection source and time expenditure, firewood purchase and electricity
access (see Annex 2 for further details).
Nepal 2010 Living Standards Survey – fuel most often used for cooking;
type of stove mainly used for cooking; use and collection of household
firewood; how much firewood collected and time spent; source of firewood
(own land, community-managed forest, government forest, other);
expenditure on wood and charcoal; monetary value of firewood collected;
time spent by household members collecting firewood.
Niger 2011 Enquête Nationale sur les Conditions de Vie des Ménages et
l’Agriculture – Time spent collecting firewood by household members; two
main sources of cooking fuel; expenditure on firewood for heat and
charcoal.
Nigeria 2012 GHS Panel Survey – Time spent collecting/chopping
firewood; expenditure on firewood and charcoal.
Papua New Guinea 1996 Household Survey – Whether firewood gathered
or sold; fuel usually used for household cooking.
United Republic of Tanzania 2010 National Panel Survey – Time spent
collecting firewood; major fuel for cooking; major fuel for lighting.
34
Timor-Leste 2007 Survey of Living Standards – Fuel most often used for
cooking; expenditure on firewood and other fuels; whether or not wood
fetched; amount of household fuelwood production.
Uganda 2011 National Panel Survey – Time spent collecting household
firewood; types of stove used by household and type used most often;
whether main stove has a chimney; hours per day main stove is burning;
location of main stove; types of fuel used for cooking, lighting and heating
and source of fuels (gathered + source and/or purchased + source) and
amount paid; amount of firewood, charcoal and other fuels purchased,
produced or received free and unit price; timing of and reasons for
insufficiency of food to feed household, including lack of fuelwood.
In addition to information directly related to woodfuel consumption, the LSMS
agriculture modules commonly contain questions on tree crops and their value,
and expenditure on fuel (Jolliffe, 1995). The LSMS Integrated Surveys on
Agriculture24
(LSMS-ISA), developed in 2008, include questions covering tree
crops on land owned or cultivated. The LSMS-ISA has been carried out in eight
countries: Burkina Faso, Ethiopia, Malawi, Mali, Niger, Nigeria, Uganda and
United Republic of Tanzania. Forestry modules have also been developed to be
integrated into the LSMS household and community modules, as detailed in
Box 3 below.
24
For more information on the LSMS-ISAs, see
http://econ.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/EXTDEC/EXTRESEARCH/EXTLSMS/0,,c
ontentMDK:23512006~pagePK:64168445~piPK:64168309~theSitePK:3358997,00.html.
35
Box 3. LSMS Forestry Modules
Bakkegaard et al. (in prep.) have developed forestry modules to be integrated into the LSMS
household and community modules, to assess the forest and wild product contributions to
local communities and households. The publication includes guidance for integrating the
modules into LSMS surveys and options for non-LSMS users to implement the forestry
modules separately. In particular, the survey modules contain the following:
Cash and subsistence income from forest and wild products (Household module)
Other forest-related income sources (Household module)
Food and nutrition (Household and Community modules)
Employment/business benefits (forest-related)
Forest-related Assets (Household module)
Energy (Household module)
Health (quantities and use of medicinal plants for cash and subsistence) (Household
module)
Structural and fibre products (Household module)
Other products from forests or trees (Household module)
Climate change and environmental services (optional Household and Community
modules)
Extension services (Community module)
Forest clearance (optional Household module)
Food shortage, insurance, shocks and coping strategies (Household module)
Governance (optional Community module)
Woodfuel-related information is covered primarily by Core Household Module A: Income
and Core Household Module C: Forest resources – energy, health and construction (see
Annex 2 to this Technical Report). The modules aim to answer questions such as:
How important is the role of wood energy in household use, compared with other
alternatives?
Where is the household’s wood energy collected and/or produced?
Is the resource base under threat of overexploitation, and, if so, what are the
implications for household reliance?
Module A includes questions on quantities of fuelwood collected and charcoal processed by
households, together with sources and labour expenditure. Module C includes questions on
distance to the nearest supply source, household reliance on wood energy for different
purposes, purchase of fuelwood and charcoal, and resource governance i.e. where fuelwood
and wood for charcoal is collected, together with information on the legal ownership of the
land and ease of access.
36
3.2.4. The World Bank Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire
Survey (CWIQ)
The CWIQ survey series was developed by the World Bank as an inexpensive
tool to collect information on poverty, including access and satisfaction with
social services and social welfare indicators. Generally, the surveys contain
information related to housing conditions, water and sanitation, education,
health care use and access, income and assets. There is no centralized resource
for accessing CWIQ surveys, but many are listed in the International Household
Survey Network’s (IHSN) central survey catalogue25
.
The CWIQ core questionnaire26
contains two fuelwood-related questions:
1. What is the main fuel used for cooking? (Firewood, Charcoal,
Kerosene/oil, Gas, Electricity, Crop residue/sawdust, Animal waste,
Other)
2. What is the main fuel used for lighting? (Kerosene/paraffin, Gas,
Electricity, Generator, Battery, Candles, Firewood, Other)
Data from 23 CWIQ surveys covering 16 countries is available from the Global
Health Data Exchange website27
:
Burkina Faso Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire Survey – 2003, 2005,
2007
Cape Verde Core Welfare Indicator Questionnaire Survey – 2006, 2007
Congo Household Survey for Poverty Assessment – 2005
Ghana Core Welfare Indicators Survey – 1997
Grenada Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire Survey – 2005
Guinea Unified Questionnaire on Basic Indicators of Well-Being – 2002-
2003
Guinea-Bissau Core Welfare Indicator Questionnaire Survey – 2002
Lesotho Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire – 2002
Liberia Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire Survey – 2007
25
See Global Health Data Exchange for more information:
http://ghdx.healthdata.org/series/core-welfare-indicators-questionnaire-survey-cwiq. 26
The World Bank Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire Survey (CWIQ) core questionnaire
may be consulted at http://microdata.worldbank.org/index.php/catalog/1536/download/25214. 27
The Global Health Data Exchange website is available at
http://ghdx.healthdata.org/series/core-welfare-indicators-questionnaire-survey-cwiq.
37
Malawi Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire Survey – 2002
Mozambique Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire Survey –
2000-2001
Nigeria Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire Survey –
2002 (eight States), 2006
Saint Lucia Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire Survey – 2004
Sierra Leone Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire Survey – 2007
United Republic of Tanzania: Kagera Core Welfare Indicators
Questionnaire Survey – 2003
United Republic of Tanzania: Shinyanga Core Welfare Indicators
Questionnaire Survey – 2004
United Republic of Tanzania: Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire
Survey – 2005, 2006-2007
Togo Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire – 2006
3.2.5. The UNICEF Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey (MICS)
MICSs are household surveys conducted around the world that focus mainly on
issues affecting children and women. The topics addressed range from maternal
and child health, education and child mortality to child protection, HIV/AIDS
and water and sanitation. MICSs are based on standard questionnaires and
modules chosen by individual countries, based on assessment of data gaps and
needs. The survey activities are carried out by the implementing agencies with
technical support from UNICEF. MICSs aim to be representative: the average
sample size in the fifth round was of approximately 11,000 households,
although the number varies greatly from one survey to another.
MICS 3 (2005-2008/9) standard questionnaires included questions on: the type
of fuel mainly used for cooking in the household; whether food is cooked on an
open fire, an open stove or a closed stove; whether the fire/stove has a chimney
or hood; and whether cooking is usually done in the house, in a separate
building, or outdoors (see Annex 4 to this Technical Report for more details).
MICS 4 (2009-12) and 5 (2013-16) standard questionnaires included questions
on: the type of fuel mainly used for cooking in the household; whether cooking
is done in the house, in a separate building, or outdoors; and whether if in the
house, a separate room used as a kitchen (see Annex 4 for further details).
Customized questionnaires may include survey-specific questions or modules
that are not included in the standard questionnaire, and may also exclude some
38
questions or modules that are part of the standard questionnaire. Assuming,
however, that the standard fuel-related questions were included in all MICS 3, 4
and 5 surveys, information should be available for 84 countries, as shown in
Annex 4.
3.2.6. The Demographic and Health Survey (DHS)
DHSs are nationally representative household surveys supported by USAID
that provide data in the areas of population, health, and nutrition.28
The DHS Household Questionnaire includes questions for the usual members of
the household and visitors on age, sex, relationship to the head of the
household, education, parental survivorship and residence, and birth
registration. Questions are also included on source of drinking water, toilet
facilities, cooking fuel, household assets, and exposure to secondhand smoke.
DHS Phases 4 (1997-2003), 5 (2003-2008), 6 (2008-2013) and 7 (2013-2018)
contain the following questions on cooking fuel usage:
1. What type of fuel does your household mainly use for cooking?
(Electricity/LPG/Natural gas/Biogas, Kerosene, Coal, Lignite, Charcoal,
Wood, Straw/Shrubs/Grass, Agricultural crop, Animal dung, No food
cooked in household, Other (Specify)
2. Is the cooking usually done in the house, in a separate building, or
outdoors? (In the house, In a separate building, Outdoors, Other
(Specify)
DHS Phases 5-7 have been conducted in 74 countries and, in some of these, on
multiple occasions (details in Annex 5).
3.2.7. Who collections and surveys
The WHO conducts World Health Surveys (see below), supports the collection
of information on cooking and heating practices (see Box 4), and compiles
information on cooking practices in the WHO Household energy database29
.
The information in the Household energy database is used as a proxy for
exposure to household air pollution, and includes responses to questions from
28
For an overview of DHSs, see: http://www.dhsprogram.com/What-We-Do/Survey-
Types/DHS.cfm. 29
The WHO Household energy database may be consulted at
http://www.who.int/indoorair/health_impacts/he_database/en/.
39
nationally representative surveys on the primary cooking fuel in each household
interviewed. A proportion of the available surveys also included questions on
stove type, venting of smoke (“exhaust”) and cooking location, and permitted
cross-tabulation by educational level of the woman respondent and by wealth
quintile of the household.
The main multi-country surveys from which data are incorporated in the
database are listed in Table 5, together with an indication of the information
available. In addition, data are sourced from a wide range of individual country-
initiated (national) surveys, all of which provide data on cooking fuel, and
various combinations of the other topics listed in the table.
Table 5. Main multi-country surveys from which data in the WHO household energy
database are derived
Survey Cooking
fuel
Cooking
location
Stove
type
Stove and
other
ventilation
Educational
level of
respondent
Wealth
quintile of
household
DHS
X X X X X X
MICS
X X X X X X
WHSa
X X X X X
LSMS
X (X) (X)
a. WHS: World Health Survey. X: Information is available; (X) information is sometimes
available.
Box 4. Information on cooking and heating practices
International household surveys, such as the WHS (WHO), the MICS (UNICEF) and the DHS
(ORCMacro/USAID) collect information on household energy practices. With support from the
Aprovecho Research Center and with input from UNICEF and ORCMacro, the WHO prepared
a set of four questions on cooking practices to aid standardization of information, and a stove
card to facilitate correct assessment of stove type.
The four questions are:
1. What type of fuel does your household mainly use for cooking?
2. What type of stove is usually used for cooking?
a. Is smoke removed by a chimney or hood?
b. When was the chimney last cleaned?
3. Is the cooking usually done in an indoor living space, in a separate kitchen/building or
outdoors?
4. What type of ventilation is present where the stove is used?
Response options are provided for all questions.
The WHS also includes questions on the type of fuel and type of stove used for heating.
Source: WHO Indoor air pollution - Information on cooking and heating practices:
http://www.who.int/indoorair/health_impacts/cooking/en/.
40
As noted above, the WHO also maintains the GHO30
data repository, which
includes estimates of population using solid fuels for 194 countries. Most of the
information held on the GHO is segregated according to urban vs. rural
location. Many of the data sets represent the WHO’s best estimates, using
methodologies for specific indicators that aim for comparability across
countries and time; they are updated as more recent or revised data become
available, or when there are changes to the methodology being used.
3.2.7.1. The WHS
The WHS31
was launched by the WHO to strengthen national capacity to
monitor health outcomes and systems through a valid, reliable and comparable
household survey instrument. The WHS was implemented between 2002 and
2004 in countries selected to represent all regions of the world. Study samples
were nationally representative.
Household data includes a household roster, health insurance coverage, health
expenditures and indicators of permanent income or wealth. Individual-level
data include sociodemographic information, health state descriptions, health
state valuation, risk factors, chronic conditions, mortality, health care
utilization, health systems responsiveness and social capital.
The long version of the individual questionnaire contains the following fuel-
related questions:
4047. What type of fuel does your household mainly use for cooking? (1.
Gas; 2. Electricity; 3. Kerosene; 4. Coal; 5. Charcoal; 6. Wood; 7.
Agriculture/crop; 8. Animal dung; 9. Shrubs/grass; 10. Other.)
4048. What type of cooking stove is used in your house? (1. Open fire or
stove without chimney or hood; 2. Open fire or stove with chimney
or hood; 3. Closed stove with chimney; 4. Other.)
4049. Where is cooking usually done? (1. In a room used for living or
sleeping; 2. In a separate room used as kitchen; 3. In a separate
building used as kitchen; 4. Outdoors.)
4050. Do you heat your house when it is cold? (Yes/No)
30
The GHO data repository, population using solid fuels (estimates) may be accessed at
http://apps.who.int/gho/data/node.main.135?lang=en. 31
World Health Survey:
http://apps.who.int/healthinfo/systems/surveydata/index.php/catalog/whs/about
41
4051. What type of fuel does your household mainly use for heating? (1.
Gas; 2. Electricity; 3. Kerosene; 4. Coal; 5. Charcoal; 6. Wood; 7.
Agriculture/crop; 8. Animal dung; 9. Shrubs/grass; 10. Other.)
4052. What type of heating stove is used in your house? (1. Open fire or
stove without chimney or hood; 2. Open fire or stove with chimney
or hood; 3. Closed stove with chimney; 4. Other.)
The long version of the questionnaire was implemented in the following
countries:
Bangladesh Hungary Philippines
Bosnia and Herzegovina India Russian Federation
Brazil Kazakhstan Senegal
Burkina Faso Kenya Slovakia
Côte d'Ivoire Lao PDR Slovenia
Chad Latvia South Africa
China Malawi Spain
Comoros Malaysia Sri Lanka
Congo Mali Swaziland
Croatia Mauritania Sweden (S)
Czech Republic Mauritius Tunisia
Dominican Republic Mexico Turkey
Ecuador Morocco Ukraine
Estonia Myanmar United Arab Emirates
Ethiopia Namibia Uruguay
Georgia Nepal Viet Nam
Ghana Pakistan Zambia
Guatemala Paraguay Zimbabwe
3.2.8. The labour force survey
Labour Force Surveys or similar tools are available for 178 countries on the
International Labour Organization (ILO) website32
. Generally, they are not a
rich source of woodfuel-related information. However, a few reports do contain
relevant information, such as the following:
Botswana’s Labour Force Survey 2005/6 contained questions on time and
injuries associated with woodfuel use (see Box 5 below).
Kenya’s Economic Survey has information from the Kenya Forest Service
on sale of fuelwood for 2010-2014.
The Malawi Labour Force Survey 2013 included questions on economic
activity, including collecting firewood meant for sale.
32 Labour Force Surveys: http://www.ilo.org/dyn/lfsurvey/lfsurvey.list?p_lang=en.
42
Nepal’s Labour Force Survey 2008 included a question on main type of
cooking fuel.
The Zimbabwe 2014 Labour Force Survey collected information on the
main source of energy used by households for cooking, including wood.
In contrast, reports from the following countries did not contain any
information on energy, wood or fuel, despite the national importance of
woodfuel and energy access:
Cambodia Labour Force Report for 2007
China’s Statistical Yearbooks Database
Ghana’s Living Standards Survey 2014
The Report on the Labour Force Situation in Indonesia 2015
Viet Nam’s Report on the Labour Force Survey 2014
Box 5. 2005/06 Botswana’s Labour Force Survey questions on woodfuel collection and
use.
The survey questions may be summarized as follows:
1. Activities engaged in during the preceding 12 months, including firewood
cutting/collection, and cooking;
2. Activities engaged in during the preceding seven days, including firewood
cutting/collection;
3. Time spent on activities, including firewood collection and cooking, in the preceding
seven days;
4. Whether the activities caused any problem with school attendance or studying, and
the three main problems caused;
5. Whether activities, including firewood collection, contributed to difficulties with
schooling;
6. Number of school days missed in the preceding 12 months and whether school has
ever been missed due to various activities, including firewood collection.
7. The activity being undertaken if and when injury occurred in the preceding 12
months; the number of times injury has occurred in the preceding 12 months; the
impacts of the injury; the type of activity being undertaken when the most serious
injury occurred, including collecting firewood; the conditions experienced while
undertaking the activity;
8. Whether illness has occurred because of difficult work conditions; how many times;
the resulting impacts; the type of activity being performed when the most serious
illness occurred.
Source: Botswana Labour Force Survey 2005/06, at
http://www.cso.gov.bw/templates/cso/file/File/LFS_Report2005_2006.pdf
43
3.3. Household energy use surveys
In recent years, national energy agencies have increasingly been carrying out
household energy use surveys, to assess patterns of energy use and thus inform
the formulation of policies and programmes. The surveys focus on types of fuel
used in different applications, sources and quantities of different fuels used and
associated expenditures of time and money. Information on cooking
apparatuses, household awareness of issues related to woodfuel use, and fuel
preferences and associated reasons may also be collected.
The following subsections compare and contrast the questions posed in four
household energy use surveys in Ghana, the Philippines, Swaziland and
Uganda.
3.3.1. Ghana’s household energy use survey
A household energy use survey carried out by the Ghana Energy Commission
in 2014 included questions on the following:
1. Energy type used for: Lighting, Cooking, Refrigeration, Air
conditioning, Washing Machine, Hot Water, Electrical Appliances,
Generator.
1.1. Fossil Fuels (LPG, Kerosene, Gasoline or Diesel)
1.2. Electricity (From the grid, From generator set, From solar PV or
From solar thermal)
1.3. Traditional Fuel (Firewood or Charcoal)
1.4. Biomass (Biogas or Agric Residue)
2. Whether these fuels are used for commercial activities (e.g. bread
baking, street selling etc.) (Y/N)
3. Whether charcoal is used in the household (Y/N)
4. Source of charcoal
4.1. Nearby Agent
4.2. Local Retailer
4.3. Local Market
4.4. Distribution truck
4.5. Own Farm
44
4.6. Other (specify) …………
5. Quantity of charcoal (weigh sample)
6. Number of days charcoal sample lasts (days/weeks/month)
7. Amount spent (days/weeks/month)
8. Whether firewood is used in the household (Y/N)
9. Source of firewood (response options as for Question 4 above)
10. Quantity of firewood (weigh sample)
11. Number of days firewood sample lasts (days/weeks/month)
12. Amount spent (days/weeks/month)
3.3.2. The Philippines’ Household Energy Consumption Survey
(HECS)
The HECS is an undertaking of the Philippines’ NSO and Department of
Energy (DoE). It has been conducted in 1989, 1995, 2004 and 2011 with the
main objective of collecting and updating data and information on patterns of
household energy consumption, application and other relevant factors. The
complete results of the 2011 survey have not yet been released. However, the
2004 survey included a number of woodfuel-related questions. In particular, the
following questions were asked separately in relation to fuelwood, biomass
residues (including wood waste/sawdust) and charcoal, except where noted:
1. Whether household used fuelwood/biomass residue/charcoal from
October 2003 to September 2004 (Y/N)
2. Fuelwood/biomass residue use (cooking, heating water for bathing,
warming space, other purposes)
3. Charcoal use (cooking, heating water for bathing, ironing, other
purposes)
4. Frequency of fuelwood/biomass residue/charcoal consumption
5. Amount of fuelwood/biomass residue/charcoal consumed each time
6. Average unit cost of fuelwood/biomass residue/charcoal
7. How fuelwood/biomass residue/charcoal consumed by the household
was obtained (Purchased only, Self-collected/gathered, Both (purchased
and gathered), others)
8. Frequency of fuelwood/biomass residue/charcoal purchase
9. The amount of fuelwood/biomass residue/charcoal bought at each
purchase
10. The amount paid for fuelwood/biomass residue/charcoal at each
purchase
45
11. How often charcoal produced [not asked in relation to for fuelwood or
biomass residue]
12. Amount of charcoal the household produced each time [not asked in
relation to for fuelwood or biomass residue]
13. Source of the fuelwood for making the charcoal (Own land, Private
Land, Government land, Others) [not asked in relation to for fuelwood
or biomass residue]
14. Amount paid for labour at each fuelwood purchase [not asked in
relation to charcoal]
15. Amount paid for transport at each fuelwood purchase [not asked in
relation to charcoal]
16. Amount paid for other expenses at each fuelwood purchase [not asked
in relation to charcoal]
17. How fuelwood was bought (Delivered at home, Picked up from
market/store) [not asked in relation to charcoal]
18. Frequency of fuelwood collection/gathering [not asked in relation to
charcoal]
19. Amount of fuelwood the household usually collected/gathered each
time [not asked in relation to charcoal]
20. Where fuelwood was gathered (Own land, Private land, Government
land, Others) [not asked in relation to charcoal]
21. How much the self-collected/gathered/self-produced fuelwood/biomass
residue/charcoal would cost, if bought
Other questions and areas covered were:
1. Kind of equipment (Woodstove, Wood oven, Biofuel stove, Flat iron,
Charcoal stove, Others)
2. Equipment/Stove number
3. Type of fuel (Fuelwood, charcoal, biomass residues)
4. Type of usage (Cooking, heating water for bathing, ironing, others)
5. Frequency of use (Household)
6. Length of use (Household)
7. Did any member of your household cook anytime in September 2004?
(Y/N)
8. What combination of fuel for cooking did you use most frequently in
September 2004? (Primary) (Electricity, LPG, Kerosene, Fuelwood,
Charcoal, Others)
9. What combination of fuel for cooking did you use most frequently in
September 2004? (Secondary) (Electricity, LPG, Kerosene, Fuelwood,
Charcoal, Others)
46
10. What type/combination of cooking fuel(s) did you use most frequently
in the past 12 months? (Primary) (Electricity, LPG, Kerosene,
Fuelwood, Charcoal, Others)
11. What type/combination of cooking fuel(s) did you use most frequently
in the past 12 months? (Secondary) (Electricity, LPG, Kerosene,
Fuelwood, Charcoal, Others)
12. Why did you change your primary cooking fuel? (Moved to another
place, Previous fuel increased price, Change in income, New fuel is
more available, New fuel is more convenient to use, Other reasons)
13. Did the household undertake measures to reduce fuel consumption from
October 2003 to September 2004? (Y/N)
14. Did you practice the following domestic activities on the use of fuel?
(Used efficient stove or appliances) (Y/N)
15. Without regard to price and availability, which fuel do you prefer most
for cooking? (Fuelwood, Charcoal, Kerosene, LPG, Electricity,
Biomass residue, Natural gas, Others)
16. Agree or disagree:
a. Fuelwood is difficult to get (Y/N)
b. Fuelwood is expensive (Y/N)
c. Fuelwood is dirty (Y/N)
d. Kitchen is inappropriate for fuelwood (Y/N)
e. Fuelwood is inconvenient to use (Y/N)
f. Cooking with commercial fuel is more expensive than fuelwood
(Y/N)
g. Fuelwood gives hotter flame (Y/N)
h. Cooking with fuelwood creates better tasting dishes (Y/N)
i. Fuelwood gathering is a cause of forest denudation
47
3.3.3. Swaziland’s Energy Access Household Survey
Swaziland’s 2013 Energy Access Household Survey included the following
woodfuel-related questions33
:
Energy use for cooking
1. What type of energy do you use for cooking as a primary source?
(Wood, Electricity, LPG (Handigas), Paraffin, Solar, Other
(specify)............)
2. What are your reasons for using the above source of energy?
(Convenient, Affordable, The only one available, Other
(specify)……….)
3. What is your estimated monthly consumption in Emalangeni (if not
using Electricity)?
4. What main alternative do you use in case your primary source of
cooking energy is not available? (Wood, Electricity, LPG (Handigas),
Paraffin, Solar, Other (specify), None)
Wood usage
1. Have you heard about cleaner and wood-saving cookstoves? (Y/N)
2. Do you own a clean and wood-saving cookstove? (Y/N)
2.1.Which of the following stove/s do you own? (Masheshisa, Vesto,
Basintuthu, Modified welcome dover, Lion stove (Lubhubesi),
Rocket baking oven (specify), Other (specify))
2.2.If no, what are your reasons for not having one? (Expensive, Not
available, Not interested, Other (specify))
Questions posed in households using woodfuel for cooking
1. Is there an area where you can collect firewood in your community?
(Y/N)
2. Where do you source your wood fuel for cooking? (Communal forest,
Private Forest, Purchase, Household yard, Other (specify)…………)
3. Approximate the distance you travel to collect firewood (<1km, 1-2km,
3-5km, more than 5km)
33
The Swaziland Energy Access Household Survey Questionnaire may be downloaded at:
http://www.irena.org/DocumentDownloads/events/2015/Bioenergy%20Statistics%20Presentati
ons/Household%20energy%20surveys/Swaziland_questionnaire.pdf.
48
4. How often do you collect firewood? Number of times per
month……………..
5. How much does it cost you to get firewood, per load?
E............................
6. Is the firewood easily available? (Y/N)
7. Do you sometimes use other types of biomass as fuel e.g. cow dung,
emahlanga, iminyani, dried grass, etc? (Y/N)
7.1.1 If Yes, please specify...........
8. How do you make fire mainly for cooking? (Stove (including
homemade), Open fire, Other (specify)…………)
9. Do you think the use of wood-saving stoves can assist the people of the
area? (Yes, Not sure, State reason(s).............................)
10. Are you aware of the impact of cutting down trees? (Y/N)
11. If Yes, what is the impact of cutting down trees endlessly?
12. Are you aware of woodlotting? (Y/N)
12.1.1 If yes, do you think it is necessary for the community to focus on
woodlotting? (Y/N)
12.1.2 If yes, do you think woodlotting could be sustainable for the
community? (Y/N and if yes, how? .........................
3.3.4. Uganda’s Rural-Urban Electrification Survey
The Uganda Rural-Urban Electrification Survey 2012 included a single
question on current sources of household energy, with response options
including firewood and charcoal.34
3.4. Survey-based woodfuel studies
Woodfuel use surveys are undertaken in the context of academic research,
development studies, energy access assessments, environmental conservation
efforts, public health investigations, local enterprise development and climate
change mitigation. They may be implemented at a variety of scales – from local
to national – and make use of extremely diverse and non-uniform information,
corresponding to the particular objectives of the work involved.
34
The Household Energy Surveys in Uganda are available at
http://www.irena.org/menu/index.aspx?mnu=Subcat&PriMenuID=30&CatID=79&SubcatID=5
90&RefID=590&SubID=593&MenuType=Q.
49
Because of the diverse nature and number of studies published35
, it is not
possible to present a comprehensive review of the survey questions posed and
hypotheses tested. Instead, this Section draws attention to a range of surveys
implemented at different levels and for different purposes.
The studies performed in Cebu in the Philippines are interesting in relation to
fuel switching, changes in woodfuel supply-demand balance and impact on
forest conservation and enterprise development, during the long period over
which the studies were conducted. The studies also investigated use of different
types of fuelwood, including waste wood, which has important implications for
emissions and sustainability, and species preferences. Similarly, Jarju (2008)
focussed on tree parts used and preferred species in the Gambia (Section 3.4.2.
below). The study also covered changes in collection time, fuelwood shortages,
farmer perceptions regarding fuelwood sustainability and impact of fuelwood
use on health and expenditure. The Suriname wood energy survey (Matai et al.,
2015; Section 3.4.3. below) included many similar areas, while also collecting
information on emissions and fossil fuel substitution. The Center for
International Forestry Research-Poverty and Environment Network
(CIFOR/PEN) prototype questionnaire focuses to a greater extent on forest
resource tenure and access, as well as any changes in effort required to acquire
woodfuel, and related responses including tree planting (Section 3.4.4.).
The Voluntary Carbon Standard (VCS) module on “Estimation of baseline
emission from forest degradation caused by extraction of wood for fuel” guides
project developers in determining fuelwood consumption. In particular, surveys
must include verifiable measurements that are required to allow correlation
between stated units of fuelwood consumed (e.g. logs or trees) and volumes
(Section 3.4.5. of this Technical Report). Section 3.4.6. contains information on
the baseline methodologies used in CDM and Gold Standard stove programs.
These detail the acceptable methods used in determining woodfuel consumption
prior to the dissemination of clean cookstoves, as a means of estimating
emissions reduction and carbon credit issuance. In both cases, the survey’s
requirements are simple and focus on determining the amount of woodfuel
consumed per household member, using the existing cooking apparatus.
Two questionnaires set out in Annex 8 and Annex 9 to this Technical Report
detail the woodfuel-related questions included in surveys implemented in
35
A search for the words “fuelwood” or “firewood” in publications between 1996 and 2016 on
Science Direct returned over 10,000 results: see http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/search.
50
Ethiopia and Nepal respectively. The Ethiopia questionnaire focuses primarily
on energy use, and the Nepal questionnaire on forest management and
livelihoods. Both include questions on woodfuel consumption and trends in
availability; woodfuel source/s, their accessibility and time expenditure for
collection; and responses to shortages. Questions on cooking practices and
apparatus, and reasons in case improved cookstoves are not being used, are also
included in both questionnaires.
3.4.1. Cebu, the Philippines
Three rounds of cross-sectional woodfuel studies have been conducted in Cebu,
The Philippines (Bensel & Remedio, 1993; Remedio & Bensel, 2003; Remedio
& Bensel, in prep.). The objectives of these studies concerned household and
business woodfuel consumption; production, trade and distribution of
woodfuels; and assessment of woodfuel-related practices and techniques. The
surveys employed similar research methodologies, including structured
household interviews on energy consumption, key informant interviews, focus
group discussions among households, businesses, traders, government line
agencies and local government units, and rapid rural appraisals to assess
woodfuel management and harvesting practices. Data was also drawn from
literature reviews, and woodfuel production figures were gathered from the
national, provincial and local environment and natural resources offices and
other bodies.
The household questionnaire used in the 1993 study is provided in Annex 7 to
this Technical Report. The questionnaire includes questions on the respondent
and the household, followed by a diverse range of questions on use of different
fuel type and household cooking practices. Most questions are devoted to
fuelwood use and cover reasons for fuelwood use, fuelwood purchase and
collection, fuelwood source, fuelwood quantity used and fluctuations, fuelwood
end uses and perceptions of fuelwood use and supply sustainability. The
questionnaire poses more concise sets of questions for other fuels, including
coconut shell/husk, charcoal, electricity, LPG, kerosene and other fuels.
51
In 2013, a similar survey was administered by questionnaire to 417 randomly
selected households from 49 Cebu City central business district barangays and
8 Cebu City hilly land barangays. Information was collected in the following
areas:
1. Fuelwood usage
a. Consumption of fuelwood (including weighing),
b. Source of fuelwood (Store/Market, Delivery, Collect, Coconut
Palm, Scrap Wood/Waste, Others)
2. Coconut Shell/Husk usage
3. Charcoal usage
a. Consumption of charcoal (including weighing),
b. Source of charcoal (Store/Market, Delivery)
c. Charcoal Price
d. Charcoal usage
4. Electricity Usage
5. LPG usage
6. Kerosene usage
7. Other Fuel Usage
8. Fuel Switching
a. Best fuel for cooking? (LPG, Charcoal, Fuelwood, Electricity,
Kerosene, Others, NA, Don’t know)
b. Reasons for switching fuel?
c. Reasons for Household Fuel Choice Decisions? (Reasons to use
and Reasons not to use Fuelwood, Charcoal, Kerosene,
Electricity, LPG)
The 2013 survey also included Geographic Information System (GIS), mapping
and partial forest assessment, and gathered information on “Woody Tree
Species Selection”.
3.4.2. The Gambia
A fuelwood survey was administered in The Gambia in 1998 using a stratified
random sample of 95 respondents (Jarju, 2008). These included 22 rural farmer
52
households, 14 urban households, 10 semi-urban households, 20 “chop shops”
(small restaurants), and 29 schools. Responses were gathered in the following
areas:
1. General farm/compound information
2. Fuelwood Statistics (fuel types and uses for households, schools and
chop shops)
2.1. Type of Fuel Stove Used by households, schools and chop shops
2.2. Fuelwood Consumption Rates of households, schools and chop
shops
3. Tree Parts Used (stem/branch/cut timber)
3.1. Characteristics of Good Fuelwood Trees (responses included
calorific value, smokelessness, wood density, long-lasting flame)
3.2. Most Common Trees use for fuel (species)
3.3. Occurrence of fuelwood shortages & seasonal variations
4. Collection Techniques
4.1. Who Collects/Purchases (male/female, child/adult)
4.2. Time Spent Collecting/Purchasing fuelwood and frequency
4.3. Changes in Collection Times and Distance Travelled
(increased/remained same/decreased and reasons for
increase/decrease)
5. On-Farm Wood Production (whether respondents practice fuelwood
production other than occasionally cutting trees on farm)
5.1. Trees Left on the Farm (species present, species managed, whether
consideration would be given to planting or managing trees on
farms for fuelwood production)
5.2. Decision Makers Tree Planting (husband/wife/family)
5.3. Agroforestry techniques practised, reasons (including fuelwood
production), whether visited by agents extending agroforestry
techniques and the agency involved.
5.4. Community Efforts in Tree Planting (whether involved with tree
nurseries or community woodlots)
6. Farmers’ Opinion on/Attitude to Future Fuelwood Supplies (whether
the forest and bush will continue to meet needs without intervention,
and reasons)
53
7. Effect of Fuelwood Supplies on Household Budget and Nutrition
(whether fuelwood purchase limits purchase of other necessary goods)
7.1. Priority of Expenditure (prioritization of spending with available
cash)
7.2. Family Health (whether lack of fuelwood affects the number of
cooked meals)
7.3. Lack of Fuelwood Affecting Other Income-Generating Activities
(whether lack of fuelwood affects other income-generating
activities)
3.4.3. Suriname
A wood energy survey was conducted in Suriname between February 2013 and
February 2015 (Matai et al., 2015). The survey began with a literature review.
A questionnaire was then designed for collecting data from households and
small-scale enterprises. The households sampled were those that used wood
energy for cooking, as indicated in the 2012 national census. Aspects taken into
consideration in the survey included:
Quantity of energy wood consumed by households (families) and small-
scale enterprises in different sectors
Source of the energy wood
Type of energy wood
Timber species used as energy wood
Technology applied during the consumption process
Available quantity of wood for the generation of energy
Emission of carbon due to the consumption methods
Substitution of gas for cooking by energy wood
3.4.4. The Center for International Forestry Research Poverty
Environment Network (CIFOR/PEN)
The Center for International Forestry Research Poverty Environment Network
(CIFOR/PEN)36
is a comprehensive global analysis of tropical forests and
poverty. It includes survey data on over 8,000 households located in more than
40 study sites in a total of 25 developing countries. Comparative and detailed
socioeconomic data was collected at the household and village levels on a
quarterly basis, using standardized definitions, questionnaires and methods.
36
Further information on the CIFOR/PEN is available at: http://www1.cifor.org/pen.
54
The study sites were chosen to represent different geographical regions, forest
types, forest tenure regimes, levels of poverty, infrastructure and market access,
and population density. The prototype PEN questionnaire includes the
following questions, which focus or potentially focus on woodfuel:37
Village survey
The main products collected from different forest types and associated main
users
The most important product for the livelihood of the people in the village
(including firewood or charcoal), the change in availability over the past
five years, the reason for the change, and:
- the type of forest in which the product is collected
- the ownership status of the forest
- the existence of customary rules regulating use of the product
and whether enforced/respected
- the existence of government rules regulating use of the product
and whether enforced/respected
- whether permission is required to harvest the product, whether
there is an associated payment and who issues the permit
Household survey
1. How far, from the house/homestead, is the edge of the nearest natural or
managed forest that you can access and use?
2. Does your household collect firewood? (If “no”, go to 8.)
3. If “yes”, how many hours per week do the members of your household
spend on collecting firewood for family use? (adult time should be
reported; child time = 50 percent of adult time)
4. Does your household now spend more or less time on getting firewood
than you did five years ago?
5. How has the availability of firewood changed over the past five years?
6. If firewood has declined, how has the household responded to the
decline in the availability of firewood? Please rank the most important
37
The PEN prototype questionnaire may be consulted at http://www1.cifor.org/pen/research-
tools/the-pen-prototype-questionnaire.html.
55
responses (max 3). (Increased collection time (e.g., from a farther
distance from the house); Planting trees on private land; Increased use
of agricultural residues as fuel; Buying (more) fuelwood and/or
charcoal; Buying (more) commercial fuels (kerosene, gas or electricity);
Reduced need for use of fuels, e.g. by using improved stove; More
conservative use of fuelwood for cooking and heating; Reduced number
of cooked meals; Use of improved technology; Increased use of non-
wood wild products (e.g. reeds); Restricting access/use to own forest;
Conserving standing trees for future; Making charcoal; Other, specify:
…)
7. Has your household planted any woodlots or trees on the farm over the
past five years?
8. If yes, what are the main purpose(s) of the trees planted? Please rank the
most important purposes (max 3). (Firewood for domestic use;
Firewood for sale; Fodder for own use; Fodder for sale; Timber/poles
for own use; Timber/poles for sale; Other domestic uses; Other products
for sale; Carbon sequestration; Other environmental services; Land
demarcation; To increase the value of my land; To allow my children
and/or grandchildren to see these trees; Other, specify:…)
Questions were also included on the quantity of forest products used and sold,
the land type from which they were collected and its ownership, the price for
which they were sold, the type of market and the net income.
3.4.5. The VCS REDD-Methodology Framework
The VCS REDD-Methodology Framework VM0007 is the only VCS
methodology covering non-renewable fuelwood collection. The methodology
includes Module VMD0008 – “Estimation of baseline emission from forest
degradation caused by extraction of wood for fuel.” Use of the module is
mandatory in projects when the forest is expected to degrade due to fuelwood
extraction or charcoal production. Guidance on quantifying fuelwood
consumption is given in Annex 11 below.
Module VMD0008 guides project developers in determining fuelwood
consumption and comprises two steps: (i) quantification of fuelwood
consumption by household interview or Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA),
and (ii) enumeration of the total population that affects or may affect the project
area. It is recommended to quantify fuelwood consumption, by reviewing local
56
studies and household interviews in which the interviewees are asked to
describe fuelwood consumption and number of household members. Verifiable
measurements are required, to enable correlation between stated units of
fuelwood consumed (e.g. logs or trees) and volumes.
Of 25 VCS projects developed under VM0007, however, only one, The “Evio
Kuiñaji Ese´Eja Cuana, To Mitigate Climate Change, Madre de Dios – Perú”
project, uses VMD0008. The project is registered on the VCS Pipeline, but has
not yet completed validation. Information on using the module may be available
in the VCS project description when the project completes validation (VCS,
pers. comm., 10 December 2015). Other projects in Belize, Bolivia, Brazil,
Chile, Indonesia, Madagascar, Papua New Guinea, Paraguay, Peru and Sierra
Leone found that extraction of wood for fuel was either sustainable or not
occurring.
3.4.6. Cookstove programs
The methodologies developed to generate carbon credits from improved
cookstove distribution programmes include guidance on estimating baseline
fuelwood consumption; however, they often rely on national fuelwood
consumption data. These data, together with figures on improved cookstove
fuel usage and measured or default estimates of the fNRB38
, are used to
calculate credit allocations.
The CDM provides methodologies aimed at selling carbon credits from clean
cookstove programs into markets that comply with the United Nations
Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) regulations. The Gold
Standard methodologies are applicable to the generation of carbon credits to be
sold on voluntary carbon markets. Subsections 3.4.6.1. and 3.4.6.2. summarize
the guidance provided by the CDM and the Gold Standard.
3.4.6.1. The CDM
According to CDM AMS-II.G. “Energy efficiency measures in thermal
applications of non-renewable biomass” is a small-scale methodology for
project activities that proposes introducing more efficient devices that use non-
renewable biomass, or modernizing existing devices that reduce use of non-
renewable biomass for combustion. As of January 2016, 34 registered clean
38
The UNFCCC default fNRB values (national biomass removals minus biomass growth in
protected areas, all divided by national biomass removals) may be viewed at:
https://cdm.unfccc.int/DNA/fNRB/index.html.
57
cookstove carbon projects from developing countries have applied this
methodology.39
To determine the annual quantity of woody biomass used in a
pre-project scenario, there are two options:
1. A default value of 0.5 tonnes/capita per year may be used to derive this
parameter. The number of persons served per device shall be based on a
survey conducted prior to project implementation. This option is limited
to household project devices (e.g. ovens and dryers are not eligible).
2. Based on the historical data or a sample survey conducted in accordance
with the latest version of the Standard for Sampling and surveys for
CDM project activities and programme of activities, to determine the
average annual consumption of woody biomass per device
(tonnes/year). If the monitoring period is shorter or longer than one
year, the result may be extrapolated for the monitoring period.
Project Design Documents and associated materials accessible through the
CDM project search page40
detail the baseline fuelwood consumption
estimation methods used by registered projects, and include details of the
surveys conducted.
3.4.6.2. The Gold Standard Simplified Methodology for Efficient
Cookstoves
The Gold Standard Simplified Methodology for Efficient Cookstoves41
is
designed for activities that introduce new fuelwood-burning cookstoves, to
reduce the use of non-renewable fuelwood or switch from non-renewable to
renewable fuelwood to meet household cooking needs. As of January 2016, 205
Gold Standard stove projects were listed in the Markit registry42
.
39
CDM project search: https://cdm.unfccc.int/Projects/projsearch.html. 40
CDM project activities are detailed at https://cdm.unfccc.int/Projects/index.html. 41
For further information on the Gold Standard Simplified Methodology for Efficient
Cookstoves, see http://www.goldstandard.org/sites/default/files/documents/simplified-micro-
scale-cookstove-methodology.pdf. 42
The Markit Registry – Public View may be accessed at https://mer.markit.com/br-
reg/public/index.jsp?s=ca.
58
The baseline fuel consumption survey included in the methodology covers the
user’s profile, cooking devices used, cooking location, and types and quantities
of fuels used43
:
I. End user profile
Name ____________ Gender ____________
Family Members - Adult____________ Children____________
Address____________ Contact details____________
43
The Gold Standard Simplified Methodology for Efficient Cookstoves is detailed at
http://www.goldstandard.org/sites/default/files/documents/gs-simplified-micro-scale-cookstove-
meth-2013.pdf.
59
II. End user’s fuel consumption pattern prior to project implementation
a. Cooking device:
Primary ____________
Secondary ____________
Other ____________
b. Place for cooking:
Indoor
Open
Semi-open
c. Type of fuel used, including quantity and unit:
Wood - kg/month or year
LPG - kg or cylinders/month or year
Kerosene - litres/month or year
Charcoal - kg/month or year
Coal - kg/month or year
Electricity - kWh/month or year
Other fuels - kg or litres or m3/month or year
The survey guidelines note that in many cases, the end user may not be able to
provide information on the quantity of cooking fuel in terms of the units
mentioned; therefore, local measurement units should be used, and guidelines
provided on their conversion to the required units (mass or volume).
Project Design Documents and associated materials accessible through the
Markit registry provide details on the baseline fuelwood consumption
estimation methods used by registered projects, including details of the surveys
conducted.
60
4
Options for Improving
Global Woodfuel Statistics
In efforts to improve estimates of woodfuel production and consumption in
developing countries, several factors must be considered – not least, costs and
technical challenges (Openshaw, 1979). The data, surveys and censuses
reviewed in this report provide clear indications of routes to improving the
accuracy of woodfuel consumption estimates. Several key points must be
considered. First, a huge amount of information has been collected on woodfuel
use since the 1990s; this information could be used in developing improved
estimates of global woodfuel consumption on a relatively limited budget.
Second, however, it should be taken into account that the data available often
only cover the primary type of household cooking fuel used, and not quantities
of woodfuel consumed. This information is of core importance in assessing
global forest products production, forestry sector emissions and energy demand,
and promoting sustainable natural resource management. A third point to
consider is that households use woodfuels for purposes other than cooking, such
as lighting and heating. Fourthly, few recent studies of commercial and
industrial woodfuel consumption are available for developing countries, even
though these sectors may contribute considerably to total national woodfuel
consumption.
Given the availability of existing woodfuel related data, several options could
be considered in improving global woodfuel consumption statistics and related
information. Each takes into account the lack of quantification of consumption
and other deficiencies in existing statistics to a different extent; and each option
differs with respect to resource requirements, timescales for data improvements
to be realized and the extent to which the accuracy of global woodfuel
consumption estimates is likely to be improved:
1. Revise FAO’s global woodfuel consumption estimates by updating
GDP and population estimates and projections using existing models
(see Broadhead et al., 2001).
2. Revise FAO woodfuel consumption models on the basis of additional
data on woodfuel consumption published since 1996, woodfuel
61
consumption figures submitted to FAO by countries since 1998 and up-
to-date GDP and population estimates and projections.
3. Develop a woodfuel module to be included in existing national surveys
and ultimately initiate long-term improvements in woodfuel
consumption statistics.
4. Develop a woodfuel module to determine the quantities of woodfuel
consumed in samples of households identified, in recent national
surveys, as using woodfuel as a primary cooking fuel. Sampling
frameworks used in the national survey enable scaling measured
woodfuel consumption to the national level; replication among a
representative group of countries would provide sufficient data to
significantly improve global woodfuel consumption statistics in a
relatively short timespan.
5. Improve estimates of commercial and industrial woodfuel consumption
though national level surveys, potentially run in tandem with
implementation of a household woodfuel module.
An important point to consider in developing a woodfuel module is weighing
wood, as this enables accurate estimations of consumption (FAO, 2002; Drigo,
2015). This will have significant implications on the survey teams’ time and
may require specific training; however, given the potential errors associated
with estimating woodfuel consumption in “bundles” or similar terms, it may be
necessary. Even if, on a house-to-house basis, consumption is recorded in
bundles, conversion to weight will be necessary at some stage.
An additional consideration is the possible need to convert woodfuel quantities
into energy quantities and the associated need to measure wood moisture
content, given its considerable effect on the energy content (FAO, 2002). To
measure moisture content, a moisture probe could be used. However, this will
require additional time and training for survey teams, which may not be
possible for modules that should be integrated into existing national surveys.
Other areas to be considered are highlighted by Drigo (2015), as outlined in
Box 6.
62
Box 6. Recommendations on woodfuel consumption surveys
Fuel saturation data from socioeconomic surveys
National scale socioeconomic household surveys should include options for defining
the second fuel, if not the actual mix of fuels, used by households.
Survey questionnaires
Household consumption survey questionnaires should be as simple as possible, with
the minimum essential number of questions, ranked on a priority basis and relying on
direct measurements rather than attributions of values.
Distinction of fuelwood types
A distinction between fuelwood types should be introduced, to help clarify the origin
of the fuelwood; indeed, this influences the supply/demand balance and sustainability
analyses.
Direct weighting of daily fuel consumption
Woodfuel consumption rates (per capita or per household) should be derived from
quantitative measurements carried out during the interview, rather than the
interviewee's values.
To achieve a good compromise between estimate precision and survey costs, the
“average day” approach should be applied (see FAO, 2002).
Area of consumption
The definition of urban/rural areas applied in the latest demographic census should be
applied in woodfuel surveys, to enable the scaling-up of results to the national level.
Supply systems
Formal (commercial woodfuel markets) and informal (direct collection or local,
informal supply) woodfuel supply systems should be distinguished in woodfuel
surveys, to enable assessment of supply sustainability.
Origin of woodfuels
The source of woody biomass used as fuelwood or for charcoal production should be
recorded in woodfuel surveys, to help determine the roles of forestry, agriculture and
industry.
In woodfuel surveys, the woodfuel categories defined by the Unified Bioenergy
Terminology (UBET), including direct, indirect and recovered sources should be used
(FAO, 2004).
As for direct sources, it is recommended to maintain clear distinctions between forests
(natural forests and forest plantations; other wooded lands) and other lands (farmlands,
agricultural tree and shrub plantations, windbreaks, road trees, trees outside forests,
etc.).
Source: Drigo (2015)
In developing a woodfuel module, information other than quantity of woodfuel
consumed will be of interest. The objectives of the data collection effort will be
of primary importance in defining the module’s contents and are likely to be
centred upon assessing woodfuel/energy demand, labour inputs, health
implications and GHG emissions as a planning foundation for fuel substitution
and/or sustainable woodfuel programmes. In this context, the FAO/IEA Criteria
and Indicators for Sustainable Woodfuels provide a number of elements upon
63
which information could be collected by means of household surveys (see Box
7 and Annex 10).
Box 7. Criteria and indicators for sustainable woodfuels
Through direct and indirect questions, household surveys may yield information on a range of
indicators for sustainable woodfuels developed by FAO, particularly under the following
criteria (see Annex 10 for the specific questions):
Criterion 2.1 – Land-use rights and ownership are clearly defined and established;
Criterion 2.2 – Woodfuel production is planned and implemented in a transparent and
participatory manner involving all relevant stakeholders.
Criterion 2.4 – Woodfuel production contributes to the social and cultural development
of local, rural and indigenous communities.
Criterion 2.5 – Woodfuel production minimizes negative impacts on food security.
Criterion 3.1 – Woodfuels represent the most beneficial use of woody biomass resources.
Criterion 3.2 – Woodfuels are economically viable.
Criterion 3.3 – Woodfuels contribute to local/rural economic prosperity and the
livelihoods of local residents.
Criterion 4.1 – Ecological resistance and resilience at the landscape level is maintained or
enhanced.
Criterion 4.2 – Woodfuel production does not degrade ecosystems and landscapes.
Criterion 4.3 – Biodiversity is maintained or enhanced at the landscape level.
Households may be able to provide information on indicators for sustainable charcoal
production, particularly under the following criteria (as for the above, see Annex 10):
Criterion 2.1 – The relationship between human culture and forest management and
charcoal production is recognized and respected.
Criterion 2.3 – Livelihoods are improved through the sustainable production and
consumption of charcoal.
Information on indicators under other criteria and principles must be collected separately,
through a national assessment or village- and district-level surveys.
Source: FAO and IEA Bioenergy (2010)
Different thematic emphases will be appropriate in different contexts; auxiliary
themes could be explored in additional household or community woodfuel
modules for uptake by countries as required. If different modules covering
different themes are developed, it will be important to ensure that a core module
covers basic information, to facilitate international data comparison. The core
module should also gather information on explanatory variables of use in
scaling up woodfuel-related information to national and global levels, such as
household income and urban/rural location of household. This information is
likely to be collected as part of the national survey into which the woodfuel
module is integrated; however, where the module is used alone, such basic
information will have to be gathered specifically.
64
It may be necessary to consider developing different types of module for use at
different levels, in addition to collecting data solely at the household level
(FAO, 1983). This will be particularly necessary in assessing quantities that
vary at different levels. For example, information on woodfuel
source/production and the socioeconomic and environmental context may be
best collected through focus group discussions and key informant interviews at
the community level (FAO, 2016). Where commercial and industrial production
and consumption of woodfuel is the focus, assessments at the national, regional
or provincial level, as appropriate, are likely to be necessary. Box 8 outlines
other important points to be considered in developing surveys, including areas
touched upon above.
Box 8. Key points of the conclusions and recommendations from the Proceedings of the
International Workshop on Energy Survey Methodologies for Developing Countries.
21-25 January 1980, Jekyll Island, Georgia, US.
Surveys must address the identified problems. The nature of the problem/s will help
define the questions asked and the sampling framework.
Surveys should be designed and directed by the institutions that will make use of the
information and, as such, should be designed so that the institution/s can absorb the
results and make use of them to formulate and inform decisions.
Surveys may need to be diverse. Some directed to a particular immediate decision; others
directed to a broader range of policy concerns, including problems that may arise over
the long term.
In most cases, no survey methods or approaches are universally applicable; they must be
designed for local situations and for the specific policy needs of a country, drawing on
experience of other regions and countries, particularly other developing countries.
The type of information necessary will be determined not only by policy issues, but also
by the analytical approach required. For example, time-series data or data on underlying
determinants of demand for different energy sources may be necessary, for projecting
future energy demand.
Surveys should be designed and carried out in as flexible a manner as possible, such that
initial findings can shape the survey if important information is discovered. For this to
happen, however, those who understand the basic policy issues and analytical approaches
must be involved in carrying out the survey.
In most energy decisions, there is a trade-off between energy and other elements, and one
must be certain that the associated important information is either available or gathered
along with the energy information.
Source: National Academy of Sciences (1980)
65
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69
Annex 1
The LSMS
LSMS surveys containing information on household energy and fuel are
available for 37 countries, as shown below. The hyperlinks frequently provide
access to the questionnaires used.
Country Year Survey name and link to information
Albania 1996 Employment and Welfare Survey
Albania 2002 Living Standards Measurement Survey
Albania 2003 Living Standards Measurement Survey Wave 2 Panel
Albania 2004 Living Standards Measurement Survey Wave 3 Panel
Albania 2005 Living Standards Measurement Survey
Armenia 1996 Household Budget Survey
Azerbaijan 1995 Survey of Living Conditions
Bosnia and
Herzegovina 2001 Living Standards Measurement Survey
Bosnia and
Herzegovina 2002 Living in Bosnia and Herzegovina Survey
Bosnia and
Herzegovina 2003 Living in Bosnia and Herzegovina Survey
Bosnia and
Herzegovina 2004 Living in Bosnia and Herzegovina Survey
Brazil 1997 Survey of Living Conditions
Bulgaria 1995 Integrated Household Survey
Bulgaria 1997 Integrated Household Survey
Bulgaria 2001 Integrated Household Survey
Bulgaria 2003 Multitopic Household Survey
Bulgaria 2007 Multitopic Household Survey
Burkina Faso 2014 Enquête Multisectorielle Continue
China 1995 Heibei and Liaoning Living Standards Survey
Côte d'Ivoire 1985 Enquête Permanente Auprès des Ménages
Côte d'Ivoire 1986 Enquête Permanente Auprès des Ménages
Côte d'Ivoire 1987 Enquête Permanente Auprès des Ménages
Côte d'Ivoire 1988 Enquête Permanente Auprès des Ménages
Ecuador 1994 Encuesta Condiciones de Vida
Ecuador 1995 Encuesta Condiciones de Vida
Ecuador 1998 Encuesta Condiciones de Vida
Ethiopia 2011 Rural Socioeconomic Survey
Ethiopia 2013 Socioeconomic Survey
Ghana 1987 Living Standards Survey
Ghana 1988 Living Standards Survey
70
Ghana 1991 Living Standards Survey
Ghana 1998 Living Standards Survey
Guatemala 2000 Encuesta Nacional sobre Condiciones de Vida
Guyana 1992 Living Standards Measurement Survey
India 1997 Uttar Pradesh and Bihar Survey of Living Condition...
Iraq 2006 Iraq Household Socio-Economic Survey
Iraq 2012 Iraq Household Socio-Economic Survey
Jamaica 1988 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 1989 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 1989 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 1990 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 1991 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 1992 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 1993 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 1994 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 1995 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 1996 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 1997 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 1998 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 1999 Survey of Living Conditions
Jamaica 2000 Survey of Living Conditions
Kazakhstan 1996 Living Standards Measurement Survey
Kyrgyzstan 1993 Living Standards Survey
Kyrgyzstan 1996 Living Standards Survey
Kyrgyzstan 1997 Living Standards Survey
Kyrgyzstan 1998 Living Standards Survey
Malawi 2004 Second Integrated Household Survey
Malawi 2010 Third Integrated Household Survey
Malawi 2013 Third Integrated Household Survey
Morocco 1991 Enquête Nationale sur le Niveau de Vie des Ménages...
Nepal 1996 Living Standards Survey
Nepal 2003 Living Standards Survey
Nepal 2010 Living Standards Survey
Nicaragua 1993 Encuesta Nacional de Hogares sobre Medición de Niv...
Nicaragua 1998 Encuesta Nacional de Hogares sobre Medición de Niv...
Nicaragua 1999 Encuesta Nacional de Hogares sobre Medición de Niv...
Nicaragua 2001 Encuesta Nacional de Hogares sobre Medición de Niv...
Nicaragua 2005 Encuesta Nacional de Hogares sobre Medicion de Niv...
Niger 2011 Enquête National sur les Conditions de Vie des Mén...
Nigeria 2010 GHS Panel Survey
Nigeria 2012 GHS Panel Survey
Pakistan 1991 Integrated Household Survey
Panama 1997 Encuesta de Niveles de Vida
Panama 2003 Encuesta de Niveles de Vida
Panama 2008 Encuesta de Niveles de Vida
71
Papua New
Guinea 1996 Household Survey
Peru 1985 Encuesta Nacional de Hogares sobre Medición de Niv...
Peru 1990 Encuesta de Hogares sobre Medición de Niveles de V...
Peru 1991 Encuesta Nacional de Hogares sobre Medición de Niv...
Peru 1994 Encuesta Nacional de Hogares sobre Medición de Niv...
Romania 1994 Integrated Household Survey
Serbia 2000 Kosovo Living Standards Measurement Survey
Serbia 2002 Living Standards Measurement Survey
Serbia 2003 Living Standards Measurement Survey
Serbia 2007 Living Standards Measurement Survey
South Africa 1993 Integrated Household Survey
Tajikistan 1999 Living Standards Measurement Survey
Tajikistan 2003 Living Standards Measurement Survey
Tajikistan 2007 Living Standards Survey
Tajikistan 2009 Living Standards Survey
Tanzania 1991 Kagera Health and Development Survey Wave 1
Tanzania 1992 Kagera Health and Development Survey Wave 2
Tanzania 1993 Kagera Health and Development Survey Wave 3
Tanzania 1993 Human Resource Development Survey
Tanzania 1994 Kagera Health and Development Survey Wave 4
Tanzania 2004 Kagera Health and Development Survey Wave 5
Tanzania 2008 National Panel Survey
Tanzania 2010 National Panel Survey
Tanzania 2010 Kagera Health and Development Survey Wave 6
Tanzania 2010 National Panel Survey
Timor-Leste 2001 Living Standards Survey
Timor-Leste 2007 Survey of Living Standards
Uganda 2009 National Panel Survey
Uganda 2010 National Panel Survey
Uganda 2011 National Panel Survey
Viet Nam 1992 Living Standards Survey
Viet Nam 1997 Living Standards Survey
Viet Nam 2002 Household Living Standards Survey
Viet Nam 2004 Household Living Standards Survey
Source: http://iresearch.worldbank.org/lsms/lsmssurveyFinder.htm.
72
Annex 2
Malawi national surveys including woodfuel-related
questions
There is no specific survey on woodfuel in Malawi. Rather, a number of
surveys conducted by the National Statistics Office include woodfuel-related
questions. One of these surveys is the Malawi Integrated Household Survey,
which is conducted every five years (Lewis Gombwa, National Statistical
Office Malawi, pers. comm., 15 December 2015)
The Malawi Third Integrated Household Survey 2010/11 included the
following questions44
:
1. How many hours did you spend yesterday collecting firewood (or other
fuel materials)?
2. What is your main source of lighting fuel? (Collected firewood,
Purchased firewood, Grass, Paraffin, Electricity, Gas, Battery/Dry, Cell
(Torch), Candles, Other (Specify))
3. What is your main source of cooking fuel? (Collected firewood,
Purchased firewood, Paraffin, Electricity, Gas, Charcoal, Crop residue,
Sawdust, Animal waste, Other (Specify))
4. Do you ever use firewood for fuel? (Y/N)
5. Do you ever collect firewood? (Y/N)
6. Where do you go to collect firewood? (Own woodlot, Community
woodlot, Forest reserve, Unfarmed areas of community, Other
(Specify))
7. How long does it take you to walk from your dwelling to where you
usually go to collect firewood?
8. Of the firewood you used in the past week, how much of it did you
purchase? (All, Almost all, More than half, Half, Less than half, A little,
None)
9. What is the total value of the firewood you used in the past week,
whether gathered or purchased? (Estimate purchase cost of gathered
firewood.)
44 Malawi Third Integrated Household Survey, 2010/11. Available at:
http://siteresources.worldbank.org/INTLSMS/Resources/3358986-1233781970982/5800988-
1271185595871/IHS3.Household.Qx.FINAL.pdf.
73
10. Do you have electricity working in your dwelling? (Y/N)
11. In the event of a black out, what source of energy do you use for:
11.1. Lighting? (Firewood, Paraffin, Candles, Other (Specify))
11.2. Cooking? (Charcoal, Firewood, Gas, Paraffin, Other (Specify))
74
Annex 3
Woodfuel-related modules included in Bakkegaard et al.
(in prep.)
Bakkegaard et al. (in prep.) include modules covering woodfuel use for
integration into LSMS surveys. Information on different aspects of woodfuel
use is collected in Core Household Modules A and C, as detailed below.
Core household module A: income
Module A includes questions on household income sources and earnings over
the past 12 months, and includes four sub-modules on (1) Income from Forest
and Wild Products; (2) Wage Income; (3) Business Income; and (4) Other
Forest-Related Income Sources, Including Payments for Environmental
Services (PES) Programmes.
Module A1 covers potential collection of fuelwood and includes the questions
outlined in the following subsection.
Module A1. Income from forest and wild products
1.1. During the past 12 months, have you or any member of your household
collected any forest products or other wild products (e.g. from
grasslands, fallows, etc.), for either your own use or sale?
1.2. Who primarily collected the product?
1.3. How many household members were collecting this product?
1.4. From where is the product collected?
a. old growth natural forest
b. secondary/regenerating forest
c. managed plantation forest
d. other non-forest environment with planted trees, trees on farms or tree
farms
e. other non-forest environment with natural vegetation
1.5. Labour
a. In the last 12 months, how many weeks did [HOUSEHOLD (HH)]
spend collecting [PRODUCT]?
75
b. In those weeks, how many days per week were used to collect
[PRODUCT]?
c. On those days, how many hours per day were spent collecting
[PRODUCT]?
1.6. What is the total quantity collected? (1.8 +1.9)
1.7. What is the unit of collection?
1.8. What is the quantity used? (including gifts)
1.9. What is the quantity sold? (including barter)
1.10. What is the price per unit?
1.11. What is the gross value of sales? (1.6*1.10)
1.12. What are the transport/marketing costs? (TOTAL)
1.13. What is the cost of purchased and own inputs plus hired labour?
1.14. What is the net income? (1.11-1.12-1.13)
1.15. During the past 12 (twelve) months, have you or any member of your
household processed any forest products or other wild products (e.g. from
grasslands, fallows, etc.), for either your own use or sale?
1.16. Who primarily processed the product?
1.17. How many household members were involved in processing this product?
1.18. Labour
a. In the last 12 months, how many weeks did [HH] spend processing
[PRODUCT]?
b. In those weeks, how many days per week were used to process
[PRODUCT]?
c. On those days, how many hours per day were spent processing
[PRODUCT]?
1.19 What is the total quantity processed? (1.21 +1.22)
1.20 What is the unit of product?
1.21 What is the quantity used? (incl. gifts)
1.22 What is the quantity sold? (incl. barter)
1.23 What is the price per unit?
1.24 What is the gross value of sales? (1.19*1.23)
76
1.25 What are the transport/marketing costs? (TOTAL)
1.26 What is the cost of hired labour, purchased and own raw material and
inputs used for processing?
1.27 What is the net income? (1.24-1.25-1.26)
Core household module C: forest resource – energy,
health and construction
Module C covers the use of forests and wild products for household energy,
health and construction purposes. Module C1 covers information on distance to
the forest resource; Module C2 covers use, collection and purchase of fuelwood
and charcoal, as detailed in the following subsections. Modules C3 and C4
cover, respectively, Forests and Health and Forests and Construction; they are
not reviewed here.
C1. Forest resource base
1.1. How far is it from the house/homestead to the edge of the nearest
natural or managed forest that you have access to and can use?
a. Measured in terms of distance (one way)?
b. Measured in minutes (one way) of main mode of transport (1 =
walking; 2 = boat; 3 = car/lorry; 4 = bike; 99 = other, specify:….)
C2. Forests and energy – fuelwood and charcoal
2.1. Have you or anyone in your HH used [PRODUCT] for cooking,
lighting, heating or water sterilization in the past 12 months?
2.2. When using [PRODUCT] for cooking, how much do you rely on it
compared with other energy sources (e.g. gas, electricity)?
0 = not used at all
1 = very little
2 = about half of the time
3 = mostly
4 = always
-9 = don’t know
77
2.3.When using [PRODUCT] for water sterilization, how much do you rely
on it compared with other energy sources (e.g. gas, electricity)?
(responses as per 2.2)
2.4.When using [PRODUCT] for heating, how much do you rely on it
compared with other energy sources (e.g. gas, electricity)? (responses as
per 2.2)
2.5.When using [PRODUCT] for lighting, how much do you rely on it
compared with other energy sources e.g. gas, electricity? (responses as
per 2.2)
2.6. Do you purchase any of your [PRODUCT]?
2.7. How much of your [PRODUCT] is purchased?
1 = very little
2 = about half
3 = most
4 = all >> NEXT PRODUCT
-9 = don’t know
2.8. From where do you collect this [PRODUCT]?
1 = Old-growth natural forest
2 = Secondary or regenerating natural forest
3 = Managed plantation forest
4 = other non-forest environment with trees, trees on farms (e.g.
cultivated areas) or tree farms
5 = other non-forest environment with natural vegetation
99 = other, specify:
2.9. What is the legal ownership (tenure) status of the land where you
collect [PRODUCT]?
1 = communal
2 = private
3 = state-owned
2.10 How easily can your household access this land in practice, without
concern for penalties?
1 = very easy
78
2 = somewhat easy
3 = neither difficult nor easy
4 = somewhat difficult
5 = very difficult
79
Annex 4
The UNICEF MICS
Household cooking fuel questions are included in MICS 3 and shown in Table
6 below. Those included in MICS 4 and 5 are shown in Table 7.
Assuming that these standard questions were included in all MICS 3, 4 and 5
surveys, information should be available for 84 countries, as shown in Table 8.
Table 6. MICS 3 (2005-2008/9) standard household questionnaire fuel-related questions
HC6. WHAT TYPE OF FUEL DOES YOUR
HOUSEHOLD MAINLY USE FOR COOKING?
Electricity
Liquid Propane Gas (LPG)
Natural gas
Biogas
Kerosene
Coal/Lignite
Charcoal
Wood
Straw/shrubs/grass
Animal dung
Agricultural crop residue
Other (specify) ___________________________
HC7. IN THIS HOUSEHOLD, IS FOOD COOKED
ON AN OPEN FIRE, AN OPEN STOVE OR A
CLOSED STOVE?
Probe for type.
Open fire
Open stove
Closed stove
Other (specify) __________________________
HC7A. DOES THE FIRE/STOVE HAVE A
CHIMNEY OR A HOOD?
Yes
No
HC8. IS THE COOKING USUALLY DONE IN
THE HOUSE, IN A SEPARATE BUILDING, OR
OUTDOORS?
In the house
In a separate building
Outdoors
Other (specify) __________________________
80
Table 7. MICS 4 (2009-12) and 5 (2013-16) standard household questionnaire fuel-related
questions
HC6. WHAT TYPE OF FUEL DOES YOUR
HOUSEHOLD MAINLY USE FOR COOKING?
Electricity
Liquefied Petroleum Gas (LPG)
Natural gas
Biogas
Kerosene
Coal/Lignite
Charcoal
Wood
Straw/Shrubs/Grass
Animal dung
Agricultural crop residue
No food cooked in household
Other (specify) __________________________
HC7. IS THE COOKING USUALLY DONE IN
THE HOUSE, IN A SEPARATE BUILDING, OR
OUTDOORS?
If “In the house”, probe: IS IT DONE IN
A SEPARATE ROOM USED AS A
KITCHEN?
In the house
In a separate room used as kitchen
Elsewhere in the house
In a separate building
Outdoors
Other (specify) __________________________
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Table 8. MICS surveys including fuel-related questions
Country Year
Data set
availability
(as of Dec 2015)
Afghanistan 2010-2011 Available
Albania 2005 Available
Algeria 2012-2013 Not yet available
Algeria 2006 Not available
Argentina 2011-2012 Available
Bangladesh 2012-2013 Available
Bangladesh 2006 Available
Barbados 2012 Available
Belarus 2012 Available
Belarus 2005 Available
Belize 2015 Not yet available
Belize 2011 Available
Belize 2006 Available
Benin 2014 Not yet available
Bhutan 2010 Available
Bosnia and Herzegovina 2011-2012 Available
Bosnia and Herzegovina 2006 Available
Bosnia and Herzegovina (Roma Settlements) 2011-2012 Available
Burkina Faso 2006 Available
Burundi 2005 Available
Cameroon 2014 Not yet available
Cameroon 2006 Available
Central African Republic 2010 Available
Central African Republic 2006 Available
Chad 2010 Available
Congo 2014-2015 Not yet available
Congo, Democratic Republic of the 2010 Available
Costa Rica 2011 Available
Côte d'Ivoire 2016 Not yet available
Côte d'Ivoire 2006 Available
Cuba 2014 Available
Cuba 2010-2011 Available
Cuba 2006 Available
Djibouti 2006 Available
Dominican Republic 2014 Not yet available
Egypt (Sub-national) 2013-2014 Not yet available
El Salvador 2014 Not yet available
82
Gambia 2010 Not yet available
Gambia 2005-2006 Available
Georgia 2005 Available
Ghana 2011 Available
Ghana 2006 Available
Ghana (Accra) 2010-2011 Available
Ghana (District) 2007-2008 Not available
Guinea 2016 Not yet available
Guinea-Bissau 2014 Not yet available
Guinea-Bissau 2010 Not yet available
Guinea-Bissau 2006 Available
Guyana 2014 Not yet available
Guyana 2006-2007 Available
Indonesia (Papua Selected Districts) 2011 Available
Indonesia (West Papua Selected Districts) 2011 Available
Iraq 2015 Not yet available
Iraq 2011 Available
Iraq 2006 Available
Jamaica 2011 Available
Jamaica 2005 Available
Kazakhstan 2015 Not yet available
Kazakhstan 2010-2011 Available
Kazakhstan 2006 Available
Kenya (Bungoma County) 2013-2014 Not yet available
Kenya (Eastern Province) 2008 Not available
Kenya (Kakamega County) 2013-2014 Not yet available
Kenya (Mombasa Informal Settlements) 2009 Available
Kenya (Nyanza Province) 2011 Available
Kenya (Turkana County) 2013-2014 Not yet available
Korea, Democratic People’s Republic of 2009 Restricted
Kosovo 2013-2014 Available
Kosovo (Roma, Ashkali, and Egyptian Communities) 2013-2014 Available
Kyrgyzstan 2014 Not yet available
Kyrgyzstan 2005-2006 Available
Lao People’s Democratic Republic 2011-2012 Available
Lao People’s Democratic Republic 2006 Available
Lebanon (Palestinians) 2011 Available
Lebanon (Palestinians) 2005-2006 Available
Macedonia, The Former Yugoslav Rep. of 2011 Available
Macedonia, The Former Yugoslav Rep. of 2005-2006 Available
83
Macedonia, The Former Yugoslav Rep. of (Roma
settlements) 2011 Available
Madagascar (South) 2012 Available
Malawi 2013-2014 Available
Malawi 2006 Available
Mali 2015 Not yet available
Mali 2009-2010 Not yet available
Mauritania 2015 Not yet available
Mauritania 2011 Available
Mauritania 2007 Available
Mexico 2015 Not yet available
Moldova, Republic of 2012 Available
Mongolia 2013-2014 Not yet available
Mongolia 2010 Available
Mongolia 2005 Available
Mongolia (Khuvsgul Aimag) 2012 Available
Mongolia (Nalaikh District) 2012 Not yet available
Montenegro 2013 Available
Montenegro 2005-2006 Available
Montenegro (Roma Settlements) 2013 Available
Mozambique 2008 Available
Myanmar, Republic of the Union of 2009-2010 Not available
Nepal 2014 Available
Nepal (Mid- and Far-Western Regions) 2010 Available
Nigeria 2016 Not yet available
Nigeria 2011 Available
Nigeria 2007 Available
Oman 2014 Not yet available
Pakistan (Balochistan) 2010 Available
Pakistan (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa) 2015 Not yet available
Pakistan (Punjab) 2014 Not yet available
Pakistan (Punjab) 2011 Available
Pakistan (Sindh) 2014 Not yet available
Panama 2013 Available
Qatar 2012 Not yet available
Saint Lucia 2012 Available
Sao Tome and Principe 2014 Not yet available
Sao Tome and Principe 2006 Not available
Senegal (Dakar City) 2015 Not yet available
Serbia 2014 Available
Serbia 2010 Available
84
Serbia 2005-2006 Available
Serbia (Roma settlements) 2014 Available
Serbia (Roma settlements) 2010 Available
Sierra Leone 2010 Available
Sierra Leone 2005-2006 Available
Somalia 2006 Available
Somalia (Northeast Zone) 2011 Available
Somalia (Somaliland) 2011 Available
South Sudan, Republic of 2016 Not yet available
South Sudan, Republic of 2010 Available
State of Palestine 2014 Not yet available
State of Palestine 2010 Available
Sudan 2014 Not yet available
Sudan 2010 Available
Suriname 2010 Available
Suriname 2006 Available
Swaziland 2014 Not yet available
Swaziland 2010 Available
Syrian Arab Republic 2006 Available
Syrian Arab Republic (Palestinian Refugee Camps &
Gatherings) 2006 Not available
Tajikistan 2005 Available
Thailand 2015 Not yet available
Thailand 2012-2013 Not yet available
Thailand 2005-2006 Available
Thailand (15 Provinces) 2015 Not yet available
Togo 2010 Available
Togo 2006 Available
Trinidad and Tobago 2011 Not yet available
Trinidad and Tobago 2006 Available
Tunisia 2011-2012 Available
Tunisia 2006 Not available
Turkmenistan 2015 Not yet available
Turkmenistan 2006 Available
Ukraine 2012 Available
Ukraine 2005 Available
United Arab Emirates 2015 Not yet available
Uruguay 2012-2013 Not yet available
Uzbekistan 2006 Available
Vanuatu 2007-2008 Available
Viet Nam 2013-2014 Available
85
Viet Nam 2010-2011 Available
Viet Nam 2006 Available
Yemen 2006 Available
Zimbabwe 2014 Available
Zimbabwe 2009 Available
86
Annex 5
Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) data sets
containing information on cooking fuel use
1. Albania 2008-09
2. Armenia 2000, 2005, 2010
3. Azerbaijan 2006
4. Bangladesh 1999-00, 2004, 2007, 2011
5. Benin 2001, 2006, 2011-12
6. Bolivia 2003, 2008
7. Burkina Faso 2003, 2010
8. Burundi 2010
9. Cambodia 2000, 2005, 2010, 2014
10. Cameroon 2004, 2011
11. Cape Verde 2005
12. Chad 2004
13. Colombia 2000, 2005, 2010
14. Comoros 2012
15. Congo (Brazzaville) 2005, 2011-12
16. Congo Democratic
Republic 2007, 2013-14
17. Côte d’Ivoire 2011-12
18. Dominican Republic 1999, 2002, 2007, 2007, 2013, 2013
19. Egypt 2000, 2003, 2005, 2008, 2014
20. Equatorial Guinea 2011
21. Eritrea 2002
22. Ethiopia 2000, 2005, 2011
23. Gabon 2000, 2012
24. Gambia 2013
25. Ghana 1998, 2003, 2006, 2008, 2011, 2014
26. Guatemala 1998-99
27. Guinea 2009, 1992, 1999, 2005, 2012
28. Haiti 2000, 2005-06, 2012
29. Honduras 2005-06, 2011-12
30. India 1998-99, 2005-06
31. Indonesia 2002-03, 2007, 2012
32. Jordan 2002, 2007, 2009, 2012
33. Kazakhstan 1999
34. Kenya 2003, 2008-09
35. Kyrgyz Republic 2012
36. Lao PDR 2011-12
37. Lesotho 2004, 2009
38. Liberia 2007, 2013
39. Madagascar 2003-04, 2008-09
40. Malawi 2000, 2004, 2010
41. Maldives 2009
42. Mali 2001, 2006, 2012-13
43. Mauritania 2000-01, 2003-04
87
44. Moldova 2005
45. Morocco 2003-04
46. Mozambique 2003, 2011
47. Namibia 2000, 2006-07, 2013
48. Nepal 2001, 2006, 2011
49. Nicaragua 2001
50. Niger 2006, 2012
51. Nigeria 1999, 2003, 2008, 2013
52. Pakistan 2006-07, 2012-13
53. Peru 2000, 2004-06, 2007-08, 2009, 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014
54. Philippines 2003, 2008, 2013
55. Rwanda 2000, 2005, 2007-08, 2010
56. Samoa 2009
57. Sao Tome and Principe 2008-09, 2014
58. Senegal 1999, 2005, 2010-11, 2012-13, 2014
59. Sierra Leone 2008, 2013
60. South Africa 2003
61. Sri Lanka 2006-07
62. Swaziland 2006-07
63. Tajikistan 2012
64. United Rep. of Tanzania 1999, 2004-05, 2010
65. Timor-Leste 2009-10
66. Togo 2013-14
67. Turkey 1998, 2003
68. Turkmenistan 2000
69. Uganda 2000-01, 2006, 2011
70. Ukraine 2007
71. Vietnam 2002
72. Yemen 2013
73. Zambia 2001-02, 2007, 2013-14
74. Zimbabwe 1999, 2005-06, 2010-11
Source: http://www.dhsprogram.com/data/available-datasets.cfm
88
Annex 6
Developing countries, according to the IMF World
Economic Outlook 2015
1. Afghanistan
2. Albania
3. Algeria
4. Angola
5. Antigua and
Barbuda
6. Argentina
7. Armenia
8. Azerbaijan
9. Bahamas
10. Bahrain
11. Bangladesh
12. Barbados
13. Belarus
14. Belize
15. Benin
16. Bhutan
17. Bolivia
18. Bosnia and
Herzegovina
19. Botswana
20. Brazil
21. Brunei Darussalam
22. Bulgaria
23. Burkina Faso
24. Burundi
25. Cambodia
26. Cameroon
27. Cape Verde
28. Central African
Republic
29. Chad
30. Chile
31. China
32. Colombia
33. Comoros
34. Democratic Rep.
Congo
35. Republic of the
Congo
36. Costa Rica
37. Côte d'Ivoire
38. Croatia
39. Djibouti
40. Dominica
41. Dominican Republic
56. Guinea
57. Guinea-Bissau
58. Guyana
59. Haiti
60. Honduras
61. Hungary
62. India
63. Indonesia
64. Iran
65. Iraq
66. Jamaica
67. Jordan
68. Kazakhstan
69. Kenya
70. Kiribati
71. Kyrgyzstan
72. Lao PDR
73. Lebanon
74. Lesotho
75. Liberia
76. Libya
77. Macedonia
78. Madagascar
79. Malawi
80. Malaysia
81. Maldives
82. Mali
83. Marshall Islands
84. Mauritania
85. Mauritius
86. Mexico
87. Myanmar
88. Fed. States of
Micronesia
89. Republic of
Moldova
90. Mongolia
91. Montenegro
92. Morocco
93. Mozambique
94. Namibia
95. Nepal
96. Nicaragua
97. Niger
98. Nigeria
99. Oman
115. Senegal
116. Serbia
117. Seychelles
118. Sierra Leone
119. Solomon Islands
120. Somalia
121. South Africa
122. South Sudan
123. Sri Lanka
124. Sudan
125. Suriname
126. Swaziland
127. Syrian Arab
Republic
128. Tajikistan
129. Tanzania, United
Rep. of
130. Thailand
131. Timor-Leste
132. Togo
133. Tonga
134. Trinidad and
Tobago
135. Tunisia
136. Turkey
137. Turkmenistan
138. Tuvalu
139. Uganda
140. Ukraine
141. United Arab
Emirates
142. Uruguay
143. Uzbekistan
144. Vanuatu
145. Venezuela
146. Viet Nam
147. Yemen
148. Zambia
149. Zimbabwe
89
42. Ecuador
43. Egypt
44. El Salvador
45. Equatorial Guinea
46. Eritrea
47. Ethiopia
48. Fiji
49. Gabon
50. The Gambia
51. Georgia
52. Ghana
53. Grenada
54. Guatemala
100. Pakistan
101. Palau
102. Panama
103. Papua New Guinea
104. Paraguay
105. Peru
106. Philippines
107. Poland
108. Qatar
109. Romania
110. Russia
111. Rwanda
112. Saint Kitts and
Nevis
113. Saint Lucia
114. St Vincent and the
Grenadines
90
Annex 7
Household energy questionnaire used in study on
“patterns of commercial woodfuel supply, distribution
and use in the city and province of Cebu, Philippines.”45
[The “Commercial Establishment Energy-Use Questionnaire” and “Urban
Woodfuel Trader Questionnaire” are also available.]
B.1 Household energy questionnaire
Section A: Respondent qualification/enumerator information
A.1 Does the respondent make most of the fuel purchase decisions for
the household?
A.2 Does the respondent do most of the household cooking?
A.3 Is the respondent aware of the types and amounts of fuels used in
the household?
A.4 Names of enumerators.
A.5 Date of Interview.
A.6 Time begun and time finished.
Section B: Respondent information
B.1/B.2/B.3 Name/Sex/Age of respondent.
B.4 Highest level of education achieved by respondent?
B.5 Primary occupation of respondent?
B.6 Respondent/Household address.
45
Bensel & Remedio (1993). Available at:
http://wgbis.ces.iisc.ernet.in/energy/HC270799/RWEDP/acrobat/fd42.pdf.
91
Section C: Household Information
C.1 Names of household members (list).
C.2 Ages of household members (list).
C.3 Sex of each household member (list).
C.4 Primary occupation of household members (list).
C.5 Monthly income from each primary occupation (list).
C.6 Secondary occupation of household members (list).
C.7 Monthly income from each secondary occupation (list).
C.8 Other sources of income (pensions, remittances from abroad, etc.)
for each household member (list).
C.9 How long has the household been residing in Cebu City?
C.10 Place of residence before moving to Cebu City (if applicable)?
Section D: Housing Information
D.1 Status of the dwelling (owned, rented, etc.).
D.2 If rented, what is monthly rent?
D.3 If owned, can respondent estimate imputed monthly rent?
D.4 Is the residence used only as living quarters, or as living quarters
and work area?
D.5 If applicable, what kind of work is done on the premises?
D.6 Type of dwelling (single family home, duplex, apartment, etc.).
D.7 How many rooms in the residence?
D.8 Is the place of meal preparation within the house, separate from the
house, or both?
92
Section E: Fuelwood Usage
E.1 Does the household use fuelwood? (If yes, skip to E.5, if no, answer
E.2-E.4 and go to Section F)
E.2 If no, what are your reason(s) for not using fuelwood? (open-ended)
E.3 Are any of the following also a reason for your decision not to use
fuelwood? (list of precoded options)
E.4 Of the above reasons for not using fuelwood, what is the most
important reason of all?
E.5 Does the household purchase fuelwood from a store or market?
E.6 How many times a week does the household purchase fuelwood?
E.7 What amount is usually purchased each time?
E.8 How far is the place of purchase from your residence?
E.9 Does the household have fuelwood delivered to it?
E.10 How many times a month is fuelwood delivered?
E.11 How much is usually delivered each time?
E.12 Who delivers fuelwood to the household?
E.13 Does the household collect its own fuelwood?
E.14 How many times a month do you collect fuelwood?
E.15 How much wood is usually collected each time?
E.16 Where is the wood usually collected from (own land, neighbor's
land, garbage dump, riverbank, etc.)?
E.17 Which members of the household are usually responsible for
collecting fuelwood?
E.18 Does the household use coconut fronds?
E.19 What share of overall household fuelwood use is in the form of
coconut fronds?
93
E.20 Does the household use scrap wood/construction waste?
E.21 Where do you get the scrap wood from?
E.22 What share of overall household fuelwood use is in the form of
scrap wood?
E.23 What share, if any, of overall household fuelwood use is for the
preparation of animal feeds?
E.24 What share, if any, of overall household fuelwood use is for
commercial activities?
E.25 Why do you use fuelwood? (open-ended)
E.26 Are any of the following also a reason for your decision to use
fuelwood? (list of precoded options)
E.27 Of the above reasons for using fuelwood, what is the most
important reason of all?
E.28/E.29/E.30 Do you plan on continuing to use fuelwood for the next
one/three/five years?
E.31 Would you like to stop using fuelwood?
E.32 Why do you want to stop using fuelwood?
E.33 What is preventing you from discontinuing your use of fuelwood?
E.34 What was the price you paid for fuelwood the last time you
purchased it?
E.35 Have you noticed any fluctuations or changes in the price of
fuelwood during the past year?
E.36 Please explain these fluctuations or changes?
E.37 How much wood does your household usually consume in one
day? (for E.34 and E.37, actual weighings are conducted)
E.38 Are there times of the year or special occasions when your use of
fuelwood increases or decreases substantially?
E.39 What are those occasions and how does it affect fuelwood use
(increase or decrease)?
E.40 Do you think there are enough wood/trees in Cebu to meet
woodfuel demand for the next 5 years?
94
E.41 Do you think there are enough wood/trees in Cebu to meet
woodfuel demand for the next 10 years?
Section F: Coconut Shell/Husk Usage
F.1 Does the household use coconut shells/husks? (If yes, skip to F.5, if
no answer F.2-F.4 and go to Sec. G)
F.2 What are your reason(s) for not using coconut shells/husks?
(open- ended)
F.3 Are any of the following also a reason for your decision not to use
coconut shells/husks? (pre-coded)
F.4 Of the above reasons for not using coconut shells/husks, what is the
most important reason?
F.5 Does the household purchase coconut shells/husks from a store or
market?
F.6 Does the household have coconut shells/husks delivered to it?
F.7 Does the household collect its own coconut shells/husks?
F.8 What share, if any, of total household usage of coconut shells/husks
is for preparation of animal feeds?
F.9 What share, if any, of total household usage of coconut shells/husks
is for commercial activities?
F.10 Why do you use coconut shells/husks?
F.11 What quantity of coconut shells/husks does your household usually
consume in one day/week?
Section G: Charcoal Usage
G.1 Does the household use charcoal?
(If yes, skip to G.5, if no, answer G.2-G.4 and go to Section H)
G.2 If no, what are your reason(s) for not using charcoal? (open-ended)
95
G.3 Are any of the following also a reason for your decision not to use
charcoal? (list of pre-coded options)
G.4 Of the above reasons for not using charcoal, what is the most
important reason of all?
G.5 Does the household purchase charcoal from a store or market?
G.6 How many times a week does the household purchase charcoal?
G.7 What amount is usually purchased each time?
G.8 How far is the place of purchase from your residence?
G.9 Does the household have charcoal delivered to it?
G.10 How many times a month is charcoal delivered?
G.11 How much is usually delivered each time?
G.12 Who delivers charcoal to the household?
G.13 What share, if any, of overall household charcoal use is for the
preparation of animal feeds?
G.14 What share, if any, of overall household charcoal use is for
commercial activities?
G.15 What was the price you paid for charcoal the last time you
purchased it?
G.16 Have you noticed any fluctuations or changes in the price of
charcoal during the past year?
G.17 Please explain these fluctuations or changes?
G.18 How much charcoal does your household usually consume in one
week?
G.19 Are there times of the year or special occasions when your use of
charcoal increases or decreases substantially?
G.20 What are those occasions and how does it affect charcoal use
(increase or decrease)?
96
G.21 Do you use charcoal only for ironing, only for cooking, or some
combination of the two? (If a combination, provide an estimate of
approximate usage for each)
G.22 Why do you use charcoal for cooking?
Section H: Electricity Usage
H.1 Does the household use electricity? (If yes, skip to H.5, if no,
answer H.2-H.4 and go to Section J)
H.2 If no, what are your reason(s) for not using electricity? (open-
ended)
H.3 Are any of the following also a reason for your decision not to use
electricity? (precoded options)
H.4 Of the above reasons for not using electricity, what is the most
important reason of all?
H.5 Do you receive electricity from a utility, a neighbor, a generator?
H.6 Do you use electricity for cooking?
H.7 If yes, which of the following electric cooking appliances do you
use and what is frequency of use?
H.8 Why do you cook with electricity?
H.9 Do you use electricity for lighting?
H.10 How many of each type of electric lamps (fluorescent,
incandescent) are used in the home?
H.11 Do you use electricity for other appliances?
H.12 Which of the following electrical appliances is used in the home
and how many of each? (pre-coded list)
H.13 Do you use electricity for commercial activities?
H.14 Which appliances are used for commercial activities?
97
H.15 Can you estimate monthly electric charges for the household?
Section J (no Section I to avoid encoding errors): LPG Usage
J.1 Does the household use LPG?
(If yes, skip to J.5, if no, answer J.2-J.4 and go to Section K)
J.2 If no, what are your reason(s) for not using LPG? (open-ended)
J.3 Are any of the following also a reason for your decision not to use
LPG? (pre-coded options)
J.4 Of the above reasons for not using LPG, what is the most important
reason of all?
J.5 Is LPG used for cooking?
J.6 Why do you cook with LPG?
J.7 How frequently do you cook with your LPG cooking device?
J.8 Do you use LPG for commercial activities?
J.9 Besides cooking, are there any other uses for LPG in the household
(e.g. lighting)?
J.10 What size containers do you purchase LPG in?
J.11 How frequently do you usually need to refill these containers?
J.12 How much do you pay per container?
J.13 Do you pick up the LPG yourself or is it delivered?
J.14 If picked up, how far is the place of purchase from your residence?
Section K: Kerosene Usage
K.1 Does the household use kerosene?
(If yes, skip to K.5, if no, answer K.2-K.4 and go to Section L)
K.2 If no, what are your reason(s) for not using kerosene? (open-ended)
K.3 Are any of the following also a reason for your decision not to use
kerosene? (pre-coded options)
98
K.4 Of the above reasons for not using kerosene, what is the most
important reason of all?
K.5 Is kerosene used for cooking?
K.6 What type of kerosene stove do you use (e.g. gravity-feed, pressure,
wick-type)?
K.7 Why do you use kerosene for cooking?
K.8 How frequently do you cook with your kerosene stove?
K.9 Do you use kerosene for lighting?
K.10 How many of each type of kerosene lamp do you use?
K.11 Do you use kerosene for commercial activities?
K.12 Besides cooking and lighting are there any other uses for kerosene
in the home (e.g. fire starter)?
K.13 What size containers do you usually purchase kerosene in?
K.14 How frequently do you have to refill these containers?
K.15 What is the price per container?
K.16 How far is the place of purchase from your residence?
Section L: Other Fuel Usage
L.1 Does the household use any other fuels (e.g. sawdust, corn cobs,
wood shavings, etc.)?
L.2 Please list the other fuels used, modes of procurement, and prices
paid?
L.3 What are these used for and how much is consumed?
Section M: Household Cooking Practices
M.1 What types of stoves does the household keep on the premises?
M.2 Which stove does the household use the most?
M.3 If applicable, how much did your wood stove cost?
M.4 How frequently do you utilize your wood stove?
99
M.5 If applicable, how much did your charcoal stove cost?
M.6 How frequently do you utilize your charcoal stove?
M.7 If applicable, how much did your kerosene stove cost?
M.8 How frequently do you utilize your kerosene stove?
M.9 If applicable, how much did your LPG stove cost?
M.10 How frequently do you utilize your LPG stove?
M.11 If applicable, how much did your electric stove cost?
M.12 How frequently do you utilize your electric stove?
M.13 If applicable, how much did your “other” stove cost?
M.14 How frequently do you utilize your “other” stove?
M.15 How many times a day does the household usually cook meals?
M.16 On the average, how often does the household purchase cooked
prepared off the premises?
M.17 On the average, how often do household members eat meals out at
carenderias and eateries?
M.18 Does the household boil its drinking water?
M.19 What stove is usually used for boiling drinking water?
M.20 Does the household boil water for bathing?
M.21 What stove is usually used for boiling water for bathing?
M.22 Has the household changed its primary cooking fuel during the
last five years? (excluding temporary switches of short duration
due to stove problems or lack of supply)
M.23 From which fuel to which fuel did you switch (list all switches)?
M.24 What was the reason(s) for each switch?
M.25 Ignoring prices, costs of stoves, and whether the fuel is available
or not, which fuel do you think is best for cooking?
100
Section N: Conclusion
N.1 For the purpose of our survey, we need to have a rough estimate of
the income of your family from all sources. In which of these
groups (display flash card) did your total family income fall for an
average month in the past year? (Used to cross-check figures
reported for C.5, C.7 and C.8)
N.2 (For enumerator) How would you rate the respondent’s degree of
cooperation?
N.3 (For enumerator) How would you rate the accuracy/validity of their
responses?
N.4 (For enumerator) If another survey were to be done, would this be a
good household to interview?
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Annex 8
Woodfuel-related questions contained in questionnaire
for studies on rural energy and household forest values
under varying management regimes in Ethiopia46
Section 1.2.3. Health and biomass energy, cooking and
consumption habits
1. In your opinion, does the use of fuelwood, dung and crop residues cause
health problems? (Y/N)
2. What type of kitchen do you have? (Living area, Separate room,
Outdoors)
3. Do you think cooking smoke affects the health of women or children?
(Y/N)
4. If the answer to question 8 is yes, then do you think cooking smoke
causes:
a. breathing (or chest) problems in children? (Y/N)
b. breathing problems in women who do the cooking? (Y/N)
5. Do you think some cooking fuels are better for your health than others?
(Y/N)
Section 3.1. Energy consumption per week
1. Energy type (Wood, Dung, Charcoal, Branches of tree, Leaves, Crop
residues, Kerosene, diesel or benzene, Electricity, Other)
2. For what purpose did you use it? (Cooking, Lighting, Heating, Other)
3. Quantity used (Kiremt season)
4. Quantity used (Bega season)
Section 3.2.1. Biomass Collection, Purchase and Sales per Week
1. Fuel type (Firewood, Dung, Charcoal, Branches of tree, Leaves, Crop
residues, Other)
46
Beyene, Bluffstone and Mekonnen (2015).
102
2. Source (Own property, Natural forest, Community forest,
Government/state forest, Bought from market, Property of other
individuals, Other (specify)
3. Season (Kiremt/Bega)
4. Trips/week
5. Quantity per trip
6. Quantity unit
7. Travel time (both ways in hours)
8. Collection time (hours)
9. Total quantity sold last year
10. Total Amount
11. Price/Unit
12. What are the [three preferred] coping mechanisms of the household in
case of shortage of [the following] resources? Fuelwood, Dung,
Charcoal, Other fuels like crop residues, Fodder, Timber, Water, Other
(Specify)
a. Spend more time for collection
b. Reduce consumption
c. Shift to other traditional sources like residues and dung
d. Substitution from private trees
e. Buy from market
f. Change in cooking habits
g. Use of improved stoves
h. Other (specify)
13. How available is the supply of the resource in satisfying your demand?
(Excess supply, Enough, Shortage, The resource is not available and
they satisfy their demand from market)
14. What about five years ago? (Was better, The same, Worse)
Section 3.3. Cooking and consumption habits
1. Do you use improved cooking stoves? (Y/N) If No, then go to question
5.
2. What type(s) of improved stove/s do you use? (Multiple answers are
possible)
a. Stove with three stones
b. Circular stove made from mud
103
c. Ethiopian metal stove (yekesel)
d. Clay stove (“burayu stove”)
e. Lakech improved charcoal stove
f. Mirt injera stove
g. Kerosene stove
h. Other (specify)
3. When did the household start to use the stove? (Lakech____ Mirt____
Burayu____)
4. Why do you use each of the following improved stoves? Rank them,
Write 1 for the most important reason. (Lakech____ Mirt____
Burayu____Other____)
a. Easy to use
b. Environmentally friendly
c. Very cheap
d. Save time for cooking
e. Uses less fuelwood
f. Other (please specify)
If the respondent answers Q 4, go to Question 7
5. Why have you chosen not to use an improved stove? (Unavailability, do
not know its use, expensive, not durable, Other (please specify))
6. Ask the following question if the household has been using the stoves
but not using currently.
a. When did the household stop using the technology (improved
stove)? (Lakech____ Mirt____ Burayu____Other____)
b. For how long was the household using the improved stoves (in
years)? (Lakech____ Mirt____ Burayu____Other____)
7. How many meals per day did household members over ten years old eat
in the last month?
How about members under age ten?
8. How many times do you (on average) cook food (other than injera or
Kocho) per day?
9. How many times do you bake injera/prepare Kocho per week on
average? Injera________Kocho__________
10. Was there a change in the frequency of meals eaten or cooking activity
in the household? (Y/N)
104
If the answer to 10 is yes, please indicate the changes in frequency
of meals and cooking and the reason. (Scarcity of fuel, Food
shortage, Change in number of household members, Easy
availability of fuel, Easy availability of food, Other (specify)
11. What are the two most preferred energy types for cooking by the
household in descending order of importance? (Wood, Dung, Charcoal,
Branches of tree, Leaves, Crop residues, Kerosene, diesel or benzene,
Electricity, Other)
12. What are the reasons for choosing these energy types? (It is cheap,
Easily available, It is well known, We don’t have other choice, Its
effectiveness, Availability, Comfortable/convenient, Clean, Other
(specify))
Reason (s) for the most preferred_________
Reason (s) for the second most preferred_________
13. Do you use dung and fuel wood at the same time for cooking? (Y/n)
If yes, why? (To save energy, We don’t have enough wood, We
don’t have enough dung, It is a culture to do so, Other (specify)
14. If you had more fuelwood, would you use more or less dung as fuel?
(Less, More, No change)
Section 4.2. Forest institutions: Household Perception of Forest
Use and Management
25. Do you or any member of the family require any permission to collect
forest products? (Y/N)
a. Fuelwood
b. Fodder
c. Grass
d. Bamboo
e. Craft materials
f. Medicinal plants
g. Honey
h. Spices
i. Others (specify)
26. How often do you need to get permission to collect fuelwood from
forest? (Every time I collect fuelwood, Yearly, Just one time, No
permission is required)
105
27. Is there any restriction on the amount of each type of forest product you
collect from the forest? (Y/N)
106
Annex 9
Woodfuel-related questions contained in Nepal
community forestry program and UN-REDD – making
community forestry pro-poor carbon sequestration policy
household survey questionnaire47
Section 2. Forest management
2.8 What is your perception of forest management in your community forest?
(Strongly Agree, Agree, No Opinion, Disagree, Strongly disagree)
2.8.1 There are limits on how much fuelwood we can collect from our
forest?
2.8.2 Other villagers would be very unhappy with us if they found that
we had taken more than our allotment of fuelwood, fodder or
grazing.
2.8.3 If we took more fuelwood from the forest than we were allowed
to take, we would face some sort of punishment.
2.8.4 We would feel embarrassed or bad if we took more than our
allotment of fuelwood, fodder or grazing.
2.9 Do you or any member of the family require any permission to collect the
following forest products? (Y/N) Fuelwood, Timber, Leaf litter, Grass,
Grazing, Honey, Medicinal plants.
2.10 How often do you need to get permission to collect fuelwood from forest?
(Every time I collect, Yearly, Just once, Never)
2.11 Is there any restriction on the amount of each type of forest product you
collect from the forest? (Y/N)
If yes, which ones? Fuelwood, Timber, Leaf litter, Grass, Grazing, Honey,
Medicinal plants.
47
Bluffstone et al. (2015).
107
2.3 Demand and supply of forest products
What kind of forest products do you need? How much? How did you get them?
Fuelwood, Timber, Poles, Grass, Fodder, Leaf litter, Medicinal plant,
Mulching, Coal, Others (please indicate).
2.3.1 Total demand (Quantity)
2.3.2 Available from CF (Quantity)
2.3.3 State of supply from CF in last five years (1 = increasing, 2 = Decreasing,
3 = No Change)
2.3.4 Which of the following products do you get from the forest? (multiple
products possible): Firewood, Grasses, Herbs, Timber, Fodder, Leaf
litter, Poles, Straw, I do not get products from the forest.
2.3.5 Which of the above forest products is most important? (please choose
only one)
2.3.6 How do you fulfil any unmet requirements for forest products? From own
land, By buying, From other forest.
2.3.7 If buying, how much do you spend per year?
2.3.8 If firewood collection from the forest were to be restricted by one-quarter
(25%) from current levels, from where would you make up this energy
difference (check all that apply):
Community forest, Biogas, LP gas, Crop residues, Other Non-CF forest,
Coal, Dung, Kerosene, Fuelwood from own land, Electricity, Energy
conservation, Purchase fuelwood.
2.3.9 If firewood collection from the forest were to be restricted by one-half
(50%) from current levels, from where would you make up this energy
difference (check all that apply):
Categories as for 2.3.8.
2.3.10 If firewood collection from the forest were to be restricted by three-
quarters (75%) from current levels, from where would you make up this
energy difference (check all that apply):
108
Categories as for 2.3.8.
2.3.11 If firewood collection from the forest were to be completely restricted
(100%) from current levels, from where would you make up this energy
difference (check all that apply):
Categories as for 2.3.8.
Section 6: Access to assets and services
6.2. Physical status of household
6.2.15 On average, how many meals per day did household members over ten
years old eat in the last month?
6.2.16 On average, how many meals per day did household members under ten
years old eat in the last month?
6.2.17 On average, how many times do you (on average) cook food per day?
6.2.18 Which kind of fuel do you use for cooking? (Tick all major sources
based on rank)
Firewood, Biogas, LP gas, Dried small branches, Coal, Dung Brickett,
Keresone, Sawdust stove, Other…
For each answer, how much do you use per month?
6.2.19 What is your most important cooking fuel? Firewood, Biogas, LP gas,
Gobar Gas, Dried small branches, Coal, Dung bricket, Kerosene,
Sawdust, Other (specify)
6.2.20 Do you use dung and fuelwood at the same time for cooking? (Y/N)
6.2.20.1 If yes why?
6.2.21 If you had more fuelwood would you use more or less dung as fuel?
(less, more, no change)
6.2.21.1 If you would use less dung as fuel, what would you use it for?
6.2.22 Please provide the following information for each household member for
the last time she/he gathered fuelwood from the main forest (not from
own farmland) from which she/he gathers fuelwood
109
6.2.22.2 Source
6.2.22.3 Season
6.2.22.4 Quantity per trip (kg)
6.2.22.5 Travel time (both ways in hours)
6.2.22.6 Collection Time (hours)
6.2.23 How much fuelwood did you sell last year in kg?
6.2.23.1 What was the average price of that (per kg)?
6.2.24 How much fuelwood did you buy last year in kg?
6.2.24.1 What was the average price of that (per kg)?
6.2.25 For each household member, on average during the last six months, how
many fuelwood collection trips were made each week?
6.2.26 Do you use an improved stove? (Y/N)
6.2.26.1. If no, why have you chosen not to use an improved stove?
(Unavailability, do not know its use, expensive, not durable, Other
(please specify))
6.3. Landholding
6.3.1 Does your family own land? (Y/N)
6.3.2 If yes, who owns the property (Female, Male, Both)
6.3.3 How did you manage to own this property? (Parental, Purchased (bought
from self-earned money), Others (please specify)
6.3.4 How much total land does your family own?
6.3.8 Description of land use in hectares (For each land type: Farmland,
Rainfed land, Kitchen garden, Private forest, Kharbari, Others (specify))
6.3.9 Self-use (hectares)
6.3.10 Taken on Lease (hectares)
110
6.3.11 Given on lease (hectares)
6.3.12 Others (hectares)
6.3.13 Changes that occurred during the last five years (Increased,
Decreased, No change)
6.4. Ownership of trees
6.4.1 Have you got trees on land owned by you? (Y/N)
6.4.1.1 If yes, total number of trees
6.4.1.2 If yes, number of pine (coniferous)
6.4.1.3 If yes, number of non-pine (non-coniferous)
6.4.1.4 If yes, number of fodder tree species
6.4.1.5 If yes, number trees other than fodder tree species
6.4.2 During the last ten years, has there been any change in the number of trees
in your land? (Decrease, Increase, Remains the same).
111
Annex 10
Principles, criteria and indicators for sustainable
woodfuels and for sustainable charcoal production48
Principles, criteria and indicators for sustainable woodfuels
[Where households gather or produce woodfuel themselves, household surveys
may yield information on those indicators marked with a tick (✓).]
Principle 1. Policies, laws, institutional frameworks and
capacity exist and are clear and consistent.
For effective governance, laws and policies specifically addressing woodfuels
must be in place and must be consistent across the various levels of government
and relevant institutions (e.g. those relating to energy and forestry). There must
be sufficient institutional capacity within regions and operations to adequately
implement and monitor such laws and policies.
CRITERION 1.1 Woodfuel production is consistent with international
commitments and follows domestic laws.
Indicators
Where governments have acceded to sustainable forest management or
energy-related agreements at an international level, the existence of specific
domestic laws and policies to support these commitments.
The existence of specific laws and policies to provide for sustained
woodfuel supply
48
FAO. 2010. Criteria and Indicators for Sustainable Woodfuels. FAO Forestry Paper 160.
FAO Publication: Rome.
112
CRITERION 1.2 Forest and energy policies address woodfuel issues.
Indicators
The extent to which forest management policies recognize woodfuel
production as one of the uses of forests and trees.
The extent to which energy policies include components specific to
woodfuels.
CRITERION 1.3 The instruments of woodfuel policies are consistent
across and within ministries, agencies and levels of government.
Indicators
The existence of mechanisms to ensure regular communication between
forest and energy agencies to coordinate woodfuel policies.
The extent to which the policies and laws administered by revenue,
pollution control, industrial development, agriculture and other agencies
are consistent with woodfuel policies.
The extent to which applicable policies at the national, regional and
local levels are consistent with each other.
The extent to which local or traditional knowledge informs management
planning and is consistent and compatible with national, regional and
local policies.
CRITERION 1.4 Information on the status and use of woodfuel resources
is available.
Indicators
The extent to which accurate forest-cover and land-use data are
available.
The extent to which woodfuel production and consumption data are
available.
The extent to which data on the sale of woodfuels from public lands,
including volumes and prices, are publicly available.
The effectiveness of government monitoring and evaluation of national,
regional and local programmes and initiatives affecting woodfuels.
113
CRITERION 1.5 The capacity to manage and regulate woodfuel
production and consumption exists.
Indicators
The extent to which national, regional and local agencies have the
human and financial resources to implement existing policies and laws
affecting woodfuels.
The extent to which woodfuel producers are trained in sustainable
woodfuel production practices.
The extent to which programmes to sensitize stakeholders on the
importance of sustainable woodfuel management are available.
Principle 2. Human and labour rights are respected and
social and cultural values are maintained or enhanced.
Local people should benefit from woodfuel production, and the social and
cultural values and the rights of local people should be respected. Criteria and
indicators under this principle include requirements for the baseline assessment
of existing social conditions so that strategies can be developed through
stakeholder participation that will ensure social equity and provide
opportunities for local people. Under this principle, woodfuel production should
have no negative impacts on food security.
CRITERION 2.1 Land-use rights and ownership are clearly defined
and established.
Indicators
The extent to which stakeholder tenure rights are stated and
acknowledged, and are secure.
The existence of mechanisms for land acquisition, and the extent to
which they are implemented.
The existence of mechanisms for resolving disputes over land rights,
and their effectiveness.
114
CRITERION 2.2 Woodfuel production is planned and implemented
in a transparent and participatory manner involving all relevant
stakeholders.
Indicators
The existence of communication mechanisms for dialogue and conflict
resolution between various stakeholders, and their effectiveness.
The extent to which the needs of the population are taken into account
by woodfuel producers.
The extent to which there is equitable sharing of benefits.
CRITERION 2.3 Workers’ wages and working conditions comply with all
applicable laws, international conventions and collective agreements.
Indicators
The extent to which woodfuel producers adhere to international labour
conventions.
The number of employees, contracted labour and small-scale
producers/growers involved in woodfuel production.
The nature of the salaries and benefits of employees in the woodfuel
sector.
The rates of injuries of employees in the woodfuel sector.
CRITERION 2.4 Woodfuel production contributes to the social and
cultural development of local, rural and indigenous communities.
Indicators
The extent of improvement in community access to energy.
The extent of improvement in the economic conditions of communities.
The extent of involvement and representation of stakeholders in
decision-making processes involving woodfuel production.
The extent to which programmes designed for women and marginalized
communities are developed and implemented.
The area and percentage of forests used for the purpose of supporting
women and marginalized communities.
115
CRITERION 2.5 Woodfuel production minimizes negative impacts on food
security.
Indicators
The extent to which forest-dependent communities retain access to
forest lands for food.
The effect of management of the woodfuel resource on the density of
species that are important sources of food.
Principle 3. Economic sustainability is ensured.
If woodfuel production is to be sustainable, the costs of producing woodfuels
must not outweigh the benefits. Under this principle, the direct and indirect
economic benefits of woodfuels should be maximized and long-term economic
viability should be maintained.
CRITERION 3.1 Woodfuels represent the most beneficial use of woody
biomass resources.
Indicators
The extent to which the direct and indirect benefits of woodfuel
production outweigh the direct and indirect costs.
The efficiency with which woodfuels in particular and forest resources
in general are used.
CRITERION 3.2 Woodfuels are economically viable.
Indicators
The cost-competitiveness of woodfuels compared with alternative
energy sources.
The profitability of woodfuels, when the full benefits and costs are
taken into account.
116
CRITERION 3.3 Woodfuels contribute to local/rural economic prosperity
and the livelihoods of local residents.
Indicators
The fairness of the distribution of income generated by woodfuel
production among woodfuel producers and workers.
The extent of employment opportunities, value-added products and
credit facilities available to rural communities as a result of woodfuel
production.
The contribution of woodfuels to economic diversity and resilience.
The accessibility and affordability of woodfuels to local residents.
Principle 4. Landscape and site productivity and
environmental values are sustained.
This principle addresses the potential impact of woodfuel production systems
on soils, hydrological systems, water quality, site productivity, biodiversity and
GHG emissions.
CRITERION 4.1 Ecological resistance and resilience at the landscape level
is maintained or enhanced.
Indicators
The existence of measures to maintain or enhance diversity at the
landscape and ecosystem levels.
The extent of degradation of sensitive or valuable ecosystems, high-
conservation-value forests, or protected areas.
The long-term sustainability of harvest levels.
The existence of long-term management strategies to sustainably meet
user demand, and the extent to which they are being implemented.
CRITERION 4.2 Woodfuel production does not degrade ecosystems and
landscapes.
Indicators
The extent to which the productive capacity of ecosystems and
landscapes, including forests, is maintained or improved.
117
The extent to which practices ensure soil conservation and
improvement.
The extent to which soil nutrient status, temperature, structure and
processes are maintained or improved.
The extent to which the quality and quantity of surface and groundwater
is maintained or improved.
The extent to which, where necessary, reforestation is carried out to
replace harvested forests.
CRITERION 4.3 Biodiversity is maintained or enhanced at the landscape
level.
Indicators
The extent to which sufficient habitat is maintained to ensure the
survival of endangered forest-dependent species.
The extent to which key habitats (e.g. cavity trees, downed woody
debris, nesting sites and other niches) within managed areas are
maintained.
The extent to which there is connectivity between habitats in the
landscape (e.g. migration corridors and the distribution of downed
woody debris).
The extent to which the conservation status of species is catalogued.
The extent to which the population densities of threatened or
endangered species are maintained.
The extent to which negative ecological impacts from the use of
genetically modified organisms are avoided.
CRITERION 4.4 Woodfuel production contributes to a net reduction in
emissions.
Indicators
The extent to which life-cycle carbon and greenhouse gas assessments
are available and taken into consideration in management planning.
The extent to which a supply chain energy balance is available and is
taken into consideration in management planning.
118
Principles, criteria and indicators for sustainable
charcoal production
[Households may be able to provide information on those indicators marked
with a tick (✓). Households involved in charcoal production will undoubtedly
be able to respond to other questions.]
Principle 1. Policies, laws, institutional frameworks and
capacity exist and are clear and consistent.
CRITERION 1.1 Policy statements and legislation for charcoal production
are established and implemented.
Indicators
The existence of policy statements supporting charcoal production.
The existence of laws governing charcoal production, and the extent to
which their implementation is monitored.
CRITERION 1.2 Effective institutional structures exist to govern charcoal
production.
Indicators
The effectiveness of capacity-building mechanisms in place.
The extent to which agencies (e.g. forestry, environment and/or energy)
responsible for monitoring and assessing forests are equipped with the
staffing and financial resources needed to fulfil their mandate.
Principle 2. Human and labour rights are respected and
social and cultural values are maintained or enhanced.
CRITERION 2.1 The relationship between human culture and forest
management and charcoal production is recognized and respected.
Indicators
The extent to which charcoal production respects local cultures.
The existence of activities that degrade human culture, and the
effectiveness of measures to combat them.
119
CRITERION 2.2 The health impact of common charcoal-making
technologies is addressed.
Indicators
The level of health-related complaints and the cost of medication for
charcoal makers, transporters and traders.
The nature and quantities of the chemical constituents of smoke emitted
from charcoal kilns/pits, including greenhouse gases such as carbon
dioxide and methane, and health damaging emissions such as
particulates and sulphur dioxide.
CRITERION 2.3 Livelihoods are improved through the sustainable
production and consumption of charcoal.
Indicators
The availability of and access to charcoal and other modern energy
sources in rural areas.
Employment generation from charcoal production activities in relation
to total national employment.
Average per capita income in various charcoal-production activities.
Principle 3. Economic sustainability is ensured.
CRITERION 3.1 There are adequate levels of investment in charcoal
production, and the sector makes a commensurate contribution to
economic growth.
Indicators
The annual investment in sustainable resource management and
charcoal production.
The aggregate value of sustainable charcoal production and rate of
return on investment in the sustainable production of charcoal compared
with rates of return on investments in other sources of energy.
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Principle 4. Landscape and site productivity and
environmental values are sustained.
CRITERION 4.1 Biodiversity is conserved in natural and planted forests
across all tenure types.
Indicators
The extent to which the diversity of species harvested for charcoal is
maintained.
The existence of specific management measures to maintain
biodiversity, such as the retention of seed trees and the protection of
nesting sites and keystone species.
CRITERION 4.2 The ecosystem and protective functions of the forest are
maintained.
Indicators
The extent to which ecologically sensitive and important areas (e.g.
plains, stream banks and steep slopes) are identified and protected with
appropriate measures.
The extent to which soil and water restoration programmes, where
necessary, are implemented.
CRITERION 4.3 The boundaries of public charcoal resources are known
and respected.
Indicators
The extent to which local users and other stakeholders recognize and
respect the boundaries of public wood energy resources (e.g. the
existence of boundary markers and conditions of access).
Evidence of forest encroachment (visual observation and records).
CRITERION 4.4 Effective local management is in place for maintaining,
assessing and monitoring forest resources for charcoal production.
Indicators
The extent to which ownership and use rights to resources are
established and respected.
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The extent to which regulations governing forest resource use for
charcoal production are enforced and monitored.
The availability of documentation and records of forest activities related
to charcoal production.
The existence of conflict-resolution mechanisms (number of cases
resolved).
CRITERION 4.5 Management plans are documented and implemented.
Indicators
The adequacy of stated management objectives (both long-term and
short-term).
The existence of processes to revise forest management and harvesting
plans periodically.
CRITERION 4.6 Local stakeholders are aware of the woodfuel resources
available for charcoal production.
Indicator
The extent to which local stakeholders involved in charcoal production
meet and interact with resource managers.
CRITERION 4.7 Charcoal supply sources are managed sustainably.
Indicators
The extent to which supply sources (i.e. natural forests, plantations, and
trees outside forests) are under sustainable management.
The legality of the fuelwood procurement system for charcoal-making,
and the reliability of records on the volumes of woodfuel harvested and
charcoal produced.
CRITERION 4.8 There are inventories of the charcoal-making
technologies currently in use and assessments of their average efficiency.
Indicator
The existence of a list of prevailing charcoal-making technologies and
assessments of their efficiencies (e.g. record/report, fuelwood-input to
charcoal-output ratio).
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CRITERION 4.9 User-friendly and environmentally friendly charcoal-
production technologies are promoted, and research and development is
under way to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of woodfuel
production and use.
Indicators
The extent to which environmentally friendly charcoal-making
technologies are promoted and applied.
The extent to which priority areas for research and development in
charcoal-making are identified (i.e. technologies and end-uses).
CRITERION 4.10 There are guidelines for charcoal quality control.
Indicator
The existence of a guide or code on charcoal production (e.g. species
selection, technology, reducing emissions, packaging, and labelling).
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Annex 11
Approved VCS module VMD0008: estimation of baseline
emission from forest degradation caused by extraction of
wood for fuel
The following guidance on quantification of fuelwood consumption was
extracted from the above document, which is available at http://www.v-c-
s.org/sites/v-c-s.org/files/VMD0008%20BL-
DFW%20Fuelwood%20baseline.pdf.
1. Quantify baseline consumption of fuelwood (VBSL,FW,i,t): Baseline
consumption of fuelwood shall be estimated by interviewing households
or implementing a Participatory Rural Appraisal (PRA).
Sampling techniques can be used where multiple households/communities
involved in fuelwood removal/charcoal production exist. Other sources of
information, such as local studies on fuel-wood consumption and/or charcoal
production can also be used. When using other sources of information, average
data from a 5 to 10 years time period preceding the starting date of the project
activity shall be used whenever possible.
Interviewees shall be asked to describe fuelwood consumption for their
household and the number of people in the household. Mean consumption will
be the household total divided by the number of people in the household. For
charcoal production by teams or groups, the mean annual per capita production
will be the total divided by the number of people in the production team.
It is unlikely that interviewed households will know their fuelwood
consumption in terms of volumes of timber. Consequently verifiable
measurements will be necessary to allow correlation between stated units (e.g.
logs or trees) and volumes.
Mobile/commercial charcoal producers shall be considered separately from
fuelwood collection for household use. In this case, estimates will be generated
from interviews and official statistics to attain mean annual production of
charcoal per producer.
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The results from the interviews or PRAs must demonstrate that fuelwood
collection and charcoal production in the project area are stable or increasing
and are unlikely to decrease in the near future due to a lack of available stocks.
If a decrease or likely future decrease are demonstrated, then the module cannot
be used for baseline determination.
2. Enumerate the total population impacting or potentially impacting the
project area
(TotPopn): The total population impacting or potentially impacting the project
area shall be enumerated.
For mobile/commercial charcoal producers TotPopn should be equal to the
number of producers impacting the project area in the baseline period. This
number should either be enumerated directly or sampled statistically.